Casino card handling system with game play feed

ABSTRACT

A card game monitor manages play of a game with a video feed of casino table game play. A dealer deals a game using a card-handling device that randomizes and dispenses cards, which may be grouped into sets of hands by the card-handling device. A card recognition system recognizes card information including rank and suit of each card dispensed by the card handling device while each card is under control of the card-handling device. A camera captures a video feed of casino table game play, which is transmitted to a computing device operated by a player. A control system receives the card information from the card recognition device and manages control of the game using hand information associated with players. Player action elections from the computing device are displayed to a dealer The player provides a player action through the computing device, which is used to facilitate play of the casino table game.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent applicationSer. No. 15/601,415, filed May 22, 2017, pending, which is acontinuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/151,340 filed May10, 2016, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,659,461, issued May 23, 2017, which is acontinuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/311,166,filed Dec. 5, 2011, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,777,710, issued Jul. 15, 2014,which is a continuation application of U.S. patent application Ser. No.11/810,864 filed Jun. 6, 2007, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,070,574, thedisclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated by reference in itsentirety herein.

The present application is also related to U.S. patent application Ser.No. 11/558,823, titled “CASINO CARD SHOES, SYSTEMS, AND METHODS FOR A NOPEEK FEATURE,” now abandoned, and U.S. patent application Ser. No.11/481,407, titled “CARD SHUFFLER WITH ADJACENT CARD INFEED AND CARDOUTPUT COMPARTMENTS,” now U.S. Pat. No. 8,342,525, the disclosure ofeach of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entiretyherein.

TECHNICAL FIELD

Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to the field ofgaming and the field of casino table card gaming. More particularly,embodiments of the invention relate to the use of equipment for thedelivery of playing cards.

BACKGROUND

Wagering games based on the outcome of randomly generated arrangementsof cards are well known. Such games are widely played in gamingestablishments and, often, a single deck of 52 playing cards is used toplay the game. Some games use multiple decks of cards (typically six oreight decks), such as blackjack and baccarat. Other games use two decksof cards, such as double deck blackjack. Many specialty games use singledecks of cards, with or without jokers and with or without selectedcards removed. Examples of such games include the THREE CARD POKER®, LETIT RIDE®, CARIBBEAN STUD POKER®, SPANISH 21®, FOUR CARD POKER®, CRAZY 4POKER® games and others. As new games are developed, card shufflers aremodified to be used in connection with the new games.

From the perspective of players, the time the dealer must spend inshuffling diminishes the excitement of the game. From the perspective ofcasinos, shuffling time reduces the number of hands played andspecifically reduces the number of wagers placed and resolved in a givenamount of time, consequently reducing casino revenue. Casinos would liketo increase the amount of revenue generated by a game without changingthe game or adding more tables. One approach is to simply speed up play.One option to increase the speed of play is to decrease the time thedealer spends shuffling.

The desire to decrease shuffling time has led to the development ofmechanical and electromechanical card shuffling devices. Such devicesincrease the speed of shuffling and dealing, thereby increasing actualplaying time. Such devices also add to the excitement of a game byreducing the amount of time the dealer or house has to spend inpreparing to play the game.

Dealers appreciate using card shufflers that place the minimum strain onthe dealer's hands, back and arms. Some existing shuffler designs putunnecessary strain on the muscles of the users. Dealers prefer shufflersthat are low profile, especially when the shuffler dispenses cardsdirectly into a game rather than shuffle batches of cards for shoegames.

Numerous approaches have been taken to the design of card shufflers.These approaches include random ejection designs (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos.6,959,925; 6,698,756; 6,299,167; 6,019,368; 5,676,372; and 5,584,483),stack separation and insertion (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,683,085 and5,944,310), interleaving designs (e.g., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,275,411 and5,695,189), for example, random insertion using a blade (U.S. Pat. No.5,382,024) and designs that utilize multiple shuffling compartments.

One such example of a compartment shuffler is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No.4,586,712 to Lorber et al. The automatic shuffling apparatus disclosedis designed to intermix multiple decks of cards under the programmedcontrol of a computer. The apparatus is a carousel-type shuffler havinga container, a storage device for storing shuffled playing cards, aremoving device and an inserting device for intermixing the playingcards in the container, a dealing shoe and supplying means for supplyingthe shuffled playing cards from the storage device to the dealing shoe.The container includes multiple card-receiving compartments, each onecapable of receiving a single card.

Another shuffler having mixing compartments arranged in a carousel isdisclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,267,248 to Johnson et al. Cards are loadedinto an infeed tray, fed sequentially past a card-reading sensor and areinserted into compartments within a carousel to either randomize or sortcards into a preselected order. The carousel moves in two directionsduring shuffling. U.S. Pat. No. 6,676,127 to Johnson et al. describesanother variation of the shuffler, in which cards are inserted into andremoved from a same side of the carousel, with the card infeed traybeing located above the discard tray (see FIG. 3).

U.S. Pat. No. 3,897,954 to Erickson et al. discloses a device fordelivering cards, one at a time, into one of a number vertically stackedcard-shuffling compartments. A logic circuit is used to determine thesequence for determining the delivery location of a card. The cardshuffler can be used to deal stacks of shuffled cards to a player.

U.S. Pat. No. 4,770,421 to Hoffman discloses a card-shuffling deviceincluding a card loading station with a conveyor belt. The belt movesthe lowermost card in a stack onto a distribution elevator whereby astack of cards is accumulated on the distribution elevator. Adjacent tothe elevator is a vertical stack of mixing pockets. A microprocessorpreprogrammed with a finite number of distribution schedules sends asequence of signals to the elevator corresponding to heights called outin the schedule. Single cards are moved into the respective pocket atthat height. The distribution schedule is either randomly selected orschedules are executed in sequence. When the microprocessor completesthe execution of a single distribution cycle, the cards are removed astack at a time and loaded into a second elevator. The second elevatordelivers cards to an output reservoir.

U.S. Pat. No. 5,275,411 to Breeding discloses a machine forautomatically shuffling and dealing hands of cards. Although this devicedoes not shuffle cards by distributing cards to multiple compartments,the machine is the first of its kind to deliver randomly arranged handsof cards to a casino card game. A single deck of cards is shuffled andthen cards are automatically dispensed into a hand-forming tray. Theshuffler includes a deck-receiving zone, a carriage section forseparating a deck into two deck portions, a sloped mechanism positionedbetween adjacent corners of the deck portions, and an apparatus forsnapping the cards over the sloped mechanism to interleave the cards.The Breeding shuffler was originally designed to be used in connectionwith single deck poker style games such as LET IT RIDE® Stud Poker and avariant of Pai Gow Poker marketed as WHO'S FIRST® Pai Gow Poker.

In an attempt to speed the rate of play of specialty table gamesequipped with a shuffler, the ACE® card shuffler as disclosed in U.S.Pat. Nos. 6,149,154, 6,588,750, 6,655,684 and 7,059,602 was developed.This shuffler operates at faster speeds than previously known shufflerdevices described above, has fewer moving parts, and requires muchshorter set up time than the prior designs. The shuffler includes a cardinfeed tray, a vertical stack of shuffling compartments and a cardoutput tray. A first card moving mechanism advances cards individuallyfrom the infeed tray into a compartment. A processor randomly directsthe placement of fed cards into the compartments, and an alignment ofeach compartment with the first card mover, forming random groups ofcards within each compartment. Groups of cards are unloaded by a secondcard-moving mechanism into the output tray.

Another compartment shuffler capable of delivering randomly arrangedhands of cards for use in casino card games is the ONE-2-SIX® shuffler(developed by Casino Austria Research & Development (CARD)). Thisshuffler is disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,659,460 and 6,889,979. Thisshuffler is capable of delivering randomly arranged hands of cards whena first delivery end is attached, and is capable of delivering acontinuous supply of cards from a shoe-type structure when a seconddelivery end is attached. Cards are fed from a feeder individually intocompartments within a carousel to accomplish random ordering of cards.

Most of the shuffler designs mentioned above are high profile andrequire loading cards into the rear of the machine, and then removingcards from the front of the machine. The cards must be lifted over thetop of the machine to return spent cards to the infeed tray, causing adealer to lift his arm over the top of the machine at the conclusion ofeach round of play. Newer shuffler designs are flush-mounted into agaming table surface. One such shuffler of this type is disclosed inU.S. Pat. No. 6,651,982.

One particular type of card shuffling device is referred to as a batchtype shuffler. One characteristic of a (single or double deck) batchtype shuffler is that when all of the cards are dispensed in a round ofplay, the remaining cards in the pack (one or two decks) are removed andthen reinserted. In use, while the game is being dealt using a firstdeck, a second deck of cards is being randomized and arranged intogroups. A discard rack is typically provided on the table so that cardsremoved from the game are staged in the rack while the other deck ofcards is being processed. Following this procedure avoids thepossibility that cards will be returned to the input tray and that thetwo decks will be intermingled. The use of two separate decks (one at atime) speeds game play because shuffling of a first deck occurs duringplay with a second deck.

Continuous shufflers, in contrast, are not unloaded at the end of around of play. Spent cards are returned and inserted, and new cardsdispensed without removing the entire set.

U.S. Pat. No. 6,959,925 to Sines discloses a single deck continuous cardshuffler known in the trade as the POKER-ONE® shuffler. This shuffleravoids the alternating use of two different decks of cards during aspecialty card game by providing a continuous supply of cards to a cardgame. Although this shuffler uses only one deck of cards, the shufflerdoes not verify that the correct number of cards (typically 52) arepresent prior to each shuffle, and consequently player cheating byinserting extra cards would go undetected.

Shufflers that communicate with network-based game systems have beendescribed in the art. An example is described in U.S. Patent PublicationNo. 2003/0064798A1. A shuffler with an on board microprocessor andcommunication port communicates with a local processor and/or a centralprocessor. The local or central processor may manage a game system.

Using these card-handling devices, there are still many variables thatcan affect a Casino's margin of profit, one of which is the accuracy ofa dealer in settling bets during any game play. Each table game in acasino is designed with a certain house advantage. The payouts for anywinning hand are pre-determined by the game developer based on rigorousmath analysis. Although it is a requirement that a dealer must be ableto recognize all winning hands (of all different card combinations) andpay out appropriate amounts, it is common that a dealer makes mistakesby either misreading a hand or paying the wrong amount to a player witha winning hand.

Therefore, there is a need for a shuffler that has all of theperformance attributes of known shufflers and enables checking theaccuracy of casino games by detecting, storing, and retrievinginformation about the composition of present and past hands of cards ina casino table game.

BRIEF SUMMARY

The present invention, in various embodiments, comprises methods,devices, systems, and computer-readable media configured for detecting,storing, and retrieving information about the composition of present andpast hands of cards dispensed in a casino table game.

An embodiment of the invention includes an apparatus that includes acard-handling device, a card recognition system, a control system, and adisplay. The card-handling device may be used for randomizing anddispensing cards during a casino table game play. The cards may bedispensed as a plurality of hands, each hand including one or morecards. The card recognition system identifies card information includinga rank and a suit of each card while each card is under the control ofthe card-handling device. The control system includes one or moreprocessors and a memory. The control system is configured to control thecard-handling device and receive the card information for each card fromthe card recognition system. The control system is also configured tomaintain a play history including a card composition of a plurality ofrounds. The card composition includes card information for each hand ofeach round. Finally, the card information of at least one hand from atleast one round of play is presented on the display.

Another embodiment of the invention comprises a system that includes:(1) a card-handling device, (2) an object recognition device, and (3) atable manager. The card-handling device may be used for randomizing anddispensing cards during a casino table game play wherein the cards maybe dispensed as a plurality of hands, each hand including one or morecards. The card-handling device includes a card recognition system forrecognizing card information including a rank and a suit of each cardwhile each card is under control of the card-handling device. The systemalso includes one or more processors for receiving the card informationfor each card from the card recognition system and determining the cardsin each hand of a current round. The object recognition deviceidentifies at least one betting object indicating at least one activeplayer position for the current round. The table manager includes acomputer and a display and is configured to receive position informationabout the at least one active player position from the objectrecognition device. The table manager also receives the card informationfrom within the card-handling device and analyzes the card informationand the position information to display the card information for the atleast one active player position. In other embodiments, card informationis determined in a processor external to the card-handling device.

Yet another embodiment of the invention includes a method of providingcards during casino table game play. The method includes causing acard-handling device to substantially automatically generate a pluralityof hands wherein each hand includes one or more cards. The method alsoincludes identifying card information including a rank and a suit ofeach card as the card moves through the card-handling device. The methodfurther includes maintaining a play history including a card compositionfor a plurality of rounds wherein the card composition of each roundincludes the cards in each hand of the round. Finally, the methodincludes displaying the card information of at least one hand from atleast one round. The display may be mounted to the card-handling deviceor may be a separate system component.

Yet another embodiment of the invention includes a card game monitoringapparatus for managing cards and play of a game with a video feed ofcasino table game play. The apparatus includes a card-handling device, acard recognition system, a camera, a communications interface, and acontrol system. The card-handling device randomizes and dispenses cards.The card recognition system recognizes card information including rankand suit of each card dispensed by the card handling device while eachcard is under control of the card-handling device. The camera captures avideo feed of casino table game play. The control system receives thecard information from the card recognition device and transmits the cardinformation and video feed to a computing device associated with aplayer. The player provides a player action through the computingdevice, which is used to facilitate play of the casino table game.

Yet another embodiment of the invention includes a computer-readablemedium including computer-executable instructions which, when executedon one or more computers, perform the method recited above.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

In the drawings:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of a card-handling device;

FIG. 2 is a perspective view of another embodiment of a card-handlingdevice;

FIG. 3 is a top plan view of the card-handling device shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 4A is a view of a first side elevational view of the card-handlingdevice shown in FIG. 1 with the cover removed to facilitate illustrationof active components of the card-handling device;

FIG. 4B is a simplified version of FIG. 4A, illustrating only selectedelements to facilitate description of those elements;

FIG. 5 is an enlarged partial side view of a card infeed tray, card feedroller, and dual function gate of the card-handling device shown in FIG.1;

FIG. 6 is an enlarged detailed view of a packer arm assembly of thecard-handling device shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 7 is a view of a second, opposite side elevational view of thecard-handling device shown in FIG. 4A;

FIG. 8 is a schematic diagram of a control system that may be used incard-handling devices that embody teachings of the present invention,such as that shown in FIG. 1;

FIG. 9 illustrates a casino table game layout and possible placement ofplayer positions;

FIG. 10 illustrates a layout of a casino table game and possibleplacement of elements of an integrated monitoring system used to monitorgaming at a casino table in accordance with embodiments of the presentinvention;

FIG. 11 is a flow diagram of a method of recognizing card informationand maintaining a play history;

FIG. 12 is a table manager that manages play of a game being playedremotely by a player using a computing device;

FIG. 13 is an interface displayed on the computing device including avideo feed of the table;

FIG. 14 shows is an environment of implementing a table manager inaccordance with embodiments of the present invention; and

FIG. 15 shows a block diagram of a method of an embodiment of thepresent invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention, in various embodiments, comprises methods,devices, and systems configured for detecting, storing, and retrievinginformation about the composition of present and past hands of cards ina casino table game.

The following provides a more detailed description of embodiments of thepresent invention. In this description, circuits and functions may beshown in block diagram form in order not to obscure the presentinvention in unnecessary detail. Conversely, specific implementationsshown and described are exemplary only and should not be construed asthe only way to implement the present invention unless specifiedotherwise herein. Additionally, block definitions and partitioning offunctions between various blocks is exemplary of a specificimplementation. It will be readily apparent to one of ordinary skill inthe art that the present invention may be practiced by numerous otherpartitioning solutions.

Further, the term “module” is used herein in a non-limiting sense andsolely to indicate functionality of particular circuits and assembliesincluded within embodiments of the invention, and may not be construedas requiring a particular physical structure, or particular partitioningbetween elements of the invention performing indicated functions.

In this description, some drawings may illustrate signals as a singlesignal for clarity of presentation and description. Persons of ordinaryskill in the art will understand that the signal may represent a bus ofsignals, wherein the bus may have a variety of bit widths and thepresent invention may be implemented on any number of data signalsincluding a single data signal.

Software processes illustrated herein are intended to illustraterepresentative processes that may be performed by the systemsillustrated herein. Unless specified otherwise, the order in which theprocess acts are described is not intended to be construed as alimitation, and acts described as occurring sequentially may occur in areverse sequence, or in one or more parallel process streams.Furthermore, the processes may be implemented in any suitable hardware,software, firmware, or combinations thereof.

When executed as firmware or software, the instructions for performingthe processes may be stored on a computer-readable medium. Acomputer-readable medium includes, but is not limited to, magnetic andoptical storage devices such as disk drives, magnetic tape, CDs (compactdisks), DVDs (digital versatile discs or digital video discs), andsemiconductor devices such as RAM, DRAM, ROM, EPROM, and Flash memory.

The disclosures of all patents, published patent applications, and otherdocuments cited in this entire application are incorporated by referencein their respective entireties herein, whether or not such incorporationis specifically asserted in association with such citation.

Card-handling devices that embody teachings of the present invention mayinclude major components that are physically arranged (for example, in alinear arrangement) in the following order: a) a playing card inputcompartment; b) a playing card retrieval compartment; and c) a playingcard-handling zone. Playing cards may be moved from the playing cardinput compartment into the playing card-handling zone and from theplaying card-handling zone into the playing card retrieval compartment.Furthermore, card-handling devices that embody teachings of the presentinvention may be configured to enable a user to either shuffle orselectively sort cards into a predefined order using the card-handlingdevices.

A perspective view of a card-handling device 10 according to embodimentsof the present invention is shown in FIG. 1. The card-handling device 10includes a card infeed tray 12, a card output tray 14, and acard-handling system or mechanism, which is described in further detailbelow. In some embodiments, the card output tray 14 may be removable formaintenance.

In some embodiments, the card infeed tray 12 and the card output tray 14may be disposed adjacent one another. Furthermore, the card infeed tray12 and the card output tray 14 each may be located near a first end 22of the card-handling device 10. In some embodiments, the card infeedtray 12 and the card output tray 14 may each include a recessed area inthe card-handling device 10, as shown in FIG. 1.

A major portion of the card-handling system may be located within acard-handling zone 16 of the card-handling device 10. The card-handlingsystem may be enclosed within a cover 18, which, in this embodiment, hasa curved upper surface 19 that is arched to enclose an upper portion ofa carousel member (which is part of the card-handling system describedin further detail below). The cover 18 may include a lock 20 to securethe cover 18 to a frame (not shown) of the card-handling device 10 toprevent unauthorized access to cards in the card-handling device 10.This locking feature advantageously allows a casino operator to shutdown a table with cards loaded into the card-handling device 10. Whenthe table is reopened, the operator can be assured that the cards heldin the machine are secure. The key to the lock may be held by pitmanagement, and the fact that the cover is, and has been, locked mayeliminate any need to unload and verify the rank and suit of each cardbefore play is resumed. Securing the cards within the card-handlingdevice 10 when the machine is not in use is a valuable time and laborsaving feature. The lock 20 may be located proximate a second end 24 ofthe card-handling device 10. Although an exemplary lock is a simplemechanical lock with rollers and a key, other locking systems may beused, such as, for example, electronic locks with keypad controls,locking systems that receive radio frequency identification (RFID)signatures, and computer-controlled locks.

Additional card-handling devices according to embodiments of the presentinvention may not include an outer cover that is intended to be openedor removed by a user. For example, FIG. 2 illustrates anothercard-handling device 10A according to embodiments of the presentinvention that includes an outer cover 18A that is not intended to beopened or removed by a user. The card-handling device 10A may beotherwise substantially similar to the card-handling device 10, and mayinclude a card infeed compartment 112, a card delivery compartment 114near a first end 122 of the card-handling device 10A, and acard-handling zone 116 and a display 134 near a second end 124 of thecard-handling device 10A. A card-handling mechanism comprising acarousel (not shown) is enclosed within the outer cover 18A. The outercover 18A may be secured to the frame 21 and may be removable formaintenance, but may not be configured for removal by a user. In someembodiments, the outer cover 18A may be secured to the frame 21 withsheet metal screws. The card-handling device 10A may further include aflange 30A that intersects an upper edge 126 of the card infeedcompartment 112 and an upper edge 128 of the card delivery compartment114 and extends a portion of the way through the card-handling zone 116.This flange 30A may be mounted on a gaming table surface such that aportion of the card-handling zone 116 is positioned within the outsideperimeter of the gaming table. A display 134 may be positioned at anelevation below the gaming table surface when the card-handling device10A is mounted on or in a gaming table. The card-handling device 10A maybe supported by the flange 30A, a table extension (not shown), apedestal, a combination of the above, or by any other support technique.

Referring back to FIG. 1, the card infeed tray 12 and the card outputtray 14 may be surrounded by a substantially flat flange 30 thatintersects the upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12 and the upperedge 28 of the card output tray 14. In this configuration, the flatflange 30, the upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12, and the upperedge 28 of the card output tray 14 may be disposed in substantially thesame plane. In other words, the upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12and the upper edge 28 of the card output tray 14 may be substantiallyco-planar. In such a configuration, the card-handling device 10 may bemounted for use on or in a gaming table such that the flat flange 30,the upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12, and the upper edge 28 ofthe card output tray 14 are substantially flush with the upper surfaceof the gaming table.

In one mounting arrangement, a gaming table surface may be provided witha notch cut into an edge of the table facing the dealer. The first end22 of the card-handling device 10 may include a recess 32 that has asize and shape that is configured to receive the side of the tabletherein along the notch. The remainder of the card-handling device 10(e.g., the second end 24 of the card-handling device 10) may besupported by a support bracket beneath the table surface. In thisconfiguration, the portion of the card-handling device 10 that isinserted into the gaming table may be flush mounted with the uppersurface of the table.

In the arrangement described above, the first end 22 of thecard-handling device 10 may be nearest the players and the second end 24of the card-handling device 10 may be nearest the pit when thecard-handling device 10 is mounted on or in a gaming table. Furthermore,the card-handling zone 16 may be located behind or to the side of thedealer and out of the way when the card-handling device 10 is mounted onor in the gaming table.

Because the card infeed tray 12 and the card output tray 14 are locatedon the same side of the card-handling zone 16 (near the first end 22 ofthe card-handling device 10), the cards may be more accessible to thedealer, and the dealer need not lift cards over the card-handling zone16 to place spent cards back into the card-handling zone 16. The presentdesign, therefore, may be relatively more ergonomically beneficial tothe user (dealer) than known designs. Positioning the card infeed tray12 at the table level also may reduce the possibility that card faceswill be accidentally shown to players.

The placement of an upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12 and anupper edge 28 of the output tray 14 substantially in the same planelying on, or proximate to, the gaming surface also may provide distinctergonometric advantages. If the dealer moves his or her hands smallerdistances during card handling, he or she is likely to experience fewerrepetitive stress or strain injuries. Therefore, delivering spent cardsto the card-handling device 10 at the gaming surface and retrievingfreshly handled cards from substantially the same location or nearbyoffers distinct user advantages.

The placement of the infeed tray 12 and the output tray 14 on the sameside of a carousel-type playing card-handling zone (discussed in furtherdetail below) also allows the user to place spent cards—face down in theinfeed tray 12, and at the same time receive fresh cards from the outputtray 14 in a face-down configuration. This attribute has been previouslydescribed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,676,127 to Johnson et al. This featureimproves the security of a carousel card-handling device 10, since nocards are exposed during loading, shuffling, or unloading.

A horizontally disposed centerline intersecting the card infeed tray 12and the card output tray 14 may also advantageously intersect acenterline of the card-handling zone 16, as will be discussed in moredetail below. This arrangement allows the machine to be fairly narrow inwidth and permits both card tray areas (but not the more bulkycard-handling zone 16) to be located on or near the playing tablesurface.

The card-handling zone 16 of the card-handling device 10 may includecard-moving elements located below the card infeed and output trays. Thecard-handling zone 16 may be capable of performing at least one of thefollowing functions: a) shuffling, b) arranging cards into a desiredorder, c) verifying completeness of a group of cards, d) reading specialmarkings on cards (such as, for example, a casino identification mark, amanufacturer identification mark, a special bonus card identificationmark, a deck identification mark, etc.), e) scanning cards forunauthorized markings, f) identifying cards lacking required markings,g) measuring card wear, h) decommissioning cards, i) applying markingsto cards, j) scanning cards for unauthorized electronic devices, k)delivering special cards such as, for example, bonus cards, promotionalcards, or wild cards, and many other useful functions.

In some embodiments of the present invention, the card-handling zone 16may comprise a card-handling system or mechanism comprising a temporarycard storage device or system 244 (FIG. 8), a card infeed mechanism orsystem 240 (FIG. 8) for moving cards from the card infeed tray 12 to thetemporary card storage system 244 (FIG. 8), and a card output mechanismor system 242 (FIG. 8) for moving cards from the temporary card storagesystem 244 (FIG. 8) to the card output tray 14. In some embodiments ofthe present invention, the temporary card storage system 244 (FIG. 8)may comprise a carousel device having multiple compartments forreceiving cards therein, as discussed in further detail below. Manytypes of card-handling systems or mechanisms that include other types oftemporary card storage devices may be utilized in card-handling devicesthat embody teachings of the present invention. Some non-limitingexamples of such other types of card-handling systems or mechanismsinclude the card-handling system described in detail in U.S. Pat. No.6,959,925 to Baker et al., the vertical compartment card-handling systemdescribed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,149,154 to Grauzer et al., and thecard-handling system described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,651,981 to Grauzer etal.

FIG. 3 is a top plan view of the card-handling device 10 shown inFIG. 1. The card infeed tray 12 and the card output tray 14 may bepositioned on the same side of the card-handling device 10 and insubstantially a common plane. For example, the card infeed tray 12 andthe card output tray 14 each may be positioned proximate the first end22 of the card-handling device 10. Furthermore, the card infeed tray 12and the card output tray 14 each may be positioned on the same side ofthe card-handling zone 16 (which may include, for example, a carousel120, as discussed in further detail below). In some embodiments of thepresent invention, the card infeed tray 12 and the card output tray 14each may be bisected by a centrally located longitudinal axis 36.Furthermore, in some embodiments, the card infeed tray 12 and the cardoutput tray 14 each may be substantially symmetrically bisected by thelongitudinal axis 36. As also shown in FIG. 3, the card infeed tray 12may be equipped with a gate member 98 whose functions will be describedin more detail below. The card infeed tray 12 also may include a sensor38 configured to detect the presence of any card provided in the cardinfeed tray 12.

Declining finger cut-outs 33A or recesses may be provided in theinterior surfaces of the card infeed tray 12, and declining fingercut-outs 33B or recesses may be provided in the interior surfaces of thecard output tray 14. The finger cut-outs 33A and 33B may have a size andshape configured to receive or accommodate at least one digit of thehand of a person therein to facilitate handling of cards in the cardinfeed tray 12 and the card output tray 14 by a user.

FIG. 4A is a side view of the card-handling device 10 shown in FIG. 1with the cover 18 removed. FIG. 4B is a simplified version of FIG. 4A,illustrating only certain elements of the card-handling device 10 tofacilitate description thereof. Referring to FIGS. 4A and 4B incombination, the card-handling device 10 may include a card infeedsystem 240 (FIG. 8) comprising a first drive system and a second drivesystem.

The first drive system may include a first card infeed motor 40 (FIG.4B) that is configured to drive rotation of a card feed roller 42 usinga first endless toothed belt 43 coupled to both a drive sprocket 44,which is mounted on a drive shaft 41 of the motor 40, and the card feedroller 42. A lowermost card in a stack of spent cards placed in the cardinfeed tray 12 will come into contact with card feed roller 42. Thefirst card infeed motor 40 is also configured to rotationally drive afirst advancing roller 48 using the first endless toothed belt 43. Asecond endless toothed belt 52 meshes with a sprocket 50 as well as asprocket 54 on a shaft carrying a second advancing roller 56. In thisconfiguration, as the first card infeed motor 40 drives rotation of thecard feed roller 42 and the first advancing roller 48 with the firstendless toothed belt 43, the first card infeed motor 40 will also driverotation of a second advancing roller 56 with a second endless toothedbelt 52. First opposing idler roller 58 adjacent the first advancingroller 48 forms a first nip 60 (FIG. 4A), and second opposing idlerroller 62 adjacent roller 56 forms a second nip 64 (FIG. 4B). The firstopposing idler roller 58 may be adjustable in the vertical direction ofFIG. 4A. Cards provided in the card infeed tray 12 (FIG. 4B) may besequentially moved in the horizontal direction of FIGS. 4A and 4B by thecard feed roller 42 into the first nip 60, and subsequently into thesecond nip 64.

The second drive system may include a second card infeed motor 70 (FIG.4B) that is configured to drive rotation of a third advancing roller 72and a fourth advancing roller 74 using a third endless toothed belt 76that is coupled to a pulley 78 mounted on a drive shaft 71 of the motor70, a pulley 80 mounted on a shaft carrying the third advancing roller72, and a pulley 82 mounted on a shaft carrying the fourth advancingroller 74. A third opposing idler roller 84 adjacent the third advancingroller 72 forms a third nip 86 (FIG. 4A), and a fourth opposing idlerroller 88 adjacent roller 74 forms a fourth nip 90 (FIG. 4B). The fourthopposing idler roller 88 and the fourth nip 90 may be oriented andconfigured to deflect a card passing therebetween upwardly and into acompartment 127 or other card storage area of a carousel 120 or othertemporary card storage device.

The first card infeed motor 40 and the second card infeed motor 70 eachmay be operatively controlled by a control system 220 (FIG. 8), which isdescribed in further detail below.

In additional embodiments of the present invention, the card infeedsystem 240 (FIG. 8) may include only one motor, or more than two motors.Additionally, the card infeed system 240 (FIG. 8) may include any numberof advancing rollers and corresponding idler rollers. Furthermore, anymeans for rotationally driving the card feed roller 42 and the advancingrollers 48, 56, 72, 74 may be used including, for example, gears,sprockets, chains, belts, etc. In yet additional embodiments, the cardfeed roller 42 and each of the advancing rollers 48, 56, 72, 74 may bedirectly mounted on a drive shaft of a corresponding motor.

Referring to FIG. 5, in some embodiments of the present invention, thecard infeed system 240 (FIG. 8) of the card-handling device 10 mayfurther include a gate member 98 operatively associated with the cardinfeed tray 12. The gate member 98 may comprise an extension arm 100having a first end that is connected to a shaft 102. The shaft 102 maybe rotationally driven by an infeed gate motor 108 and an endless belt110. A roller 104 may extend substantially transversely from theextension arm 100 (i.e., into the plane of FIG. 5), and may be used toreduce frictional contact with cards 115 in the card infeed tray 12. Theroller 104 may be rotationally coupled to the second end of theextension arm 100, and may extend substantially across a width of anycards 115 in the card infeed tray 12 (or a length of any cards 115 inthe card infeed tray 12, depending on the orientation of the cards 115in the card infeed tray 12). In this configuration, the extension arm100 will pivot about the shaft 102 as the infeed gate motor 108 drivesrotation of the shaft 102 using the endless belt 110. The extension arm100 and roller 104 may be positioned in an upright and retracted pivotalposition (not shown) in which the roller 104 does not engage any cards115 in the card infeed tray 12, to a downwardly angled engaged positionin which the roller 104 engages and abuts against the cards 115 in thecard infeed tray 12.

The gate member 98 may serve a number of functions. For example, as thenumber of cards 115 in the card infeed tray 12 is reduced, the weight ofthe stack of cards 115 in the card infeed tray 12 is reduced, which mayreduce the frictional force between the lowermost card 115 in the cardinfeed tray 12 and the card feed roller 42. The reduced frictional forcebetween the lowermost card 115 in the card infeed tray 12 and the cardfeed roller 42 may impair the ability of the card feed roller 42 to movethe lowermost card 115 to the first advancing roller 48 and to otherelements of the card infeed system 240 (FIG. 8). Therefore, the gatemember 98 may be used to apply a downward force to the cards 115 in thecard infeed tray 12 to maintain the frictional force between thelowermost card 115 in the card infeed tray 12 and the card feed roller42 above a threshold level. In some embodiments, the gate member 98 maybe used to apply a downward force to the cards 115 in the card infeedtray 12 that increases as the number of remaining cards 115 decreases toprovide a substantially constant force to the lowest card 115 in thecard infeed tray 12. In other words, the gate member 98 providesadditional weight against the cards 115 in the card infeed tray 12,which may improve the reliability by which the cards 115 in the cardinfeed tray 12 are taken into the first nip 60 (FIG. 4A) by the cardfeed roller 42.

The gate member 98 also may be used to provide a physical separationbarrier between cards 115 in the card infeed tray 12 belonging orcorresponding to different decks, or between different types of cards(such as regular cards and bonus cards, for example). When the cardinfeed system 240 (FIG. 8) of the card-handling device 10 is activelymoving cards 115 from the card infeed tray 12 to the carousel 120 orother card storage device, the gate member 98 may be in the previouslydescribed downwardly engaged position. At the same time, the dealer maybe collecting spent cards 115 from the playing table. Because the gateis in the downwardly engaged position, the dealer may put the spentcards (which may correspond to a first deck) in the card infeed tray 12on top of or over at least a portion of the gate member 98, while thecards previously placed in the card infeed tray 12 (which may correspondto a second, different deck) are being moved from the card infeed tray12 to the carousel 120 by the card infeed system 240 (FIG. 8).Therefore, in some embodiments of the present invention, a dealer orother user may load cards 115 from a first deck into the card infeedtray 12 while at least some cards 115 from a second deck remain in thecard infeed tray 12 without causing or allowing the card-handling device10 to mix cards from the first deck with cards from the second deck. Asa result, the use of the gate member 98 may permit a casino to eliminateuse of discard racks (which are typically mounted on gaming tablesurfaces for holding spent cards until they can be fed into acard-handling device), as spent cards may be placed without delaydirectly into the card infeed tray 12.

Once the last of the cards 115 below the gate member 98 in the cardinfeed tray 12 has been removed from the card infeed tray 12 by the cardinfeed system 240 (FIG. 8), the gate member 98 may be caused to rotateabout the shaft 102 to the previously described retracted position toallow any cards 115 previously placed over the gate member 98 in thecard infeed tray 12 to fall to the bottom of the card infeed tray 12adjacent the card feed roller 42. In the retracted position, the gatemember 98 may not obstruct the user from inserting additional cards 115into the card infeed tray 12.

The shaft 102 may be located a selected distance below the upper edge 26of the card infeed tray 12 (FIG. 1) so that the roller 104 does notextend substantially above the upper edge 26 of the card infeed tray 12when the gate member 98 is in the previously described retractedposition. Furthermore, the shaft 102 may be located a selected distanceabove the bottom surface 118 of the card infeed tray 12 to enable atleast one entire deck of cards 115 to be received in the card infeedtray 12 and allow the roller 104 to abut against the top card 115 in theat least one entire deck of cards 115. Furthermore, the extension arm100 may have a selected length to provide a distance between therotational axis of the shaft 102 and the rotational axis of the roller104 that is short enough that cards 115 provided over the gate member 98in the card infeed tray 12 will lift and fall to the bottom of the cardinfeed tray 12 without flipping over as the gate member 98 pivotsupwardly in the counterclockwise direction of FIG. 5. A currentlypreferred gate length is about one-third the length of the cards 115 (orthe width of the cards 115, depending on the orientation of the cards115 in the card infeed tray 12.

The infeed gate motor 108, which is used to selectively rotate the gatemember 98, may be operatively controlled by a control system 220, whichis described in further detail below.

Referring again to FIG. 4A, the card infeed system 240 (FIG. 8) of thecard-handling device 10 may further include a packer arm device 140 forassisting the insertion of a card into a compartment 127 of the carousel120 or other card storage device. As shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B, eachcompartment 127 of the carousel 120 may include a leaf spring member125. As a result, the force of each leaf spring member 125 may need tobe overcome as a card is inserted into each compartment 127. The packerarm device 140 may be used to provide additional force to the card as itleaves the fourth advancing roller 74 and corresponding opposing idlerroller 88 and enters a compartment 127 of the carousel 120.

FIG. 6 is an enlarged stand-alone view of one embodiment of a packer armdevice 140 that may be used in card-handling devices that embodyteachings of the present invention, such as the card-handling device 10.As shown in FIG. 6, the packer arm device 140 may include a packer armmotor 142, which may be mounted to the frame 21 of the card-handlingdevice 10. The packer arm motor 142 may be configured to rotate a shaft144. An eccentric cam member 145 may be mounted to the shaft 144. Anelongated packer arm 146 configured as a lever member may be pivotallycoupled at a first end 148 thereof to the eccentric cam member 145. Thepacker arm 146 also may be pivotally attached to a first end of a pivotarm member 152 at an intermediate location 151 along the packer arm 146between the first end 148 and a second end 150 thereof. A second end ofthe pivot arm member may be pivotally attached to a frame 21 of thecard-handling device 10 or another stationary element of thecard-handling device 10.

In this configuration, as the packer arm motor 142 drives rotation ofthe shaft 144 and eccentric cam member 145 in the direction indicated bythe directional arrows shown on the eccentric cam member 145 in FIG. 6,the second end 150 of the elongated packer arm 146 may rock back andforth along an arc-shaped path in the directions indicated by thedirectional arrows shown proximate the second end 150 of the elongatedpacker arm 146 in FIG. 6.

The packer arm device 140 may be located in the card-handling device 10such that the second end 150 of the elongated packer arm will abutagainst a trailing edge of a card and force the card completely into analigned compartment 127 of the carousel 120. As the eccentric cam member145 continues to rotate, the second end 150 of the elongated packer arm146 may retract to a position that will allow a subsequent card to movepast the packer arm device and into position for insertion into acompartment 127 of the carousel 120. In some embodiments of the presentinvention, the subsequently described control system 220 may cause thepacker arm 146 to retract while the carousel 120 is rotating and toextend when the carousel 120 is stationary.

The packer arm motor 142, which is used to selectively move the packerarm 146, also may be operatively controlled by a control system 220,which is described in further detail below.

Referring again to FIG. 4A, as previously discussed, the carousel 120may include a plurality of compartments 127, each of which may include aleaf spring 125 for holding cards securely within the compartment 127after insertion. In this configuration, the cards may remain securedwithin the compartments 127 as the carousel 120 rotates in either theclockwise or counterclockwise direction of FIG. 4A. Each compartment 127also may have at least one beveled surface 123 for deflecting cards intothe aligned compartment 127 during insertion. In some embodiments of thepresent invention, the compartments 127 of the carousel 120 may besubstantially equally sized, and each may be capable of holding up toten conventional playing cards. By way of example and not limitation,the carousel 120 may include thirty-eight (38) compartments 127. Inadditional embodiments, the carousel 120 may include fewer thanthirty-eight (38) compartments 127 or more than thirty-eight (38)compartments 127.

In some embodiments of the present invention, the previously describedcard infeed system 240 (FIG. 8) may be capable of selectively insertinga card into a compartment 127 of the carousel 120 either below or aboveany cards previously inserted and still disposed within that respectivecompartment. For example, each compartment 127 may have twocorresponding card insertion rotational positions of the carousel 120.When the carousel 120 is rotationally positioned in the first of thecard insertion rotational positions, any card inserted into thecompartment 127 may be inserted below or under any cards previouslyinserted and still disposed within that respective compartment. When thecarousel 120 is rotationally positioned in the second of the cardinsertion rotational positions, however, any card inserted into thecompartment 127 may be inserted above or over any cards previouslyinserted and still disposed within that respective compartment.

The path that is traveled by a card as it moves from the card infeedtray 12 to a compartment 127 of the carousel 120 is substantiallystraight and substantially horizontal. In this configuration, thedistance traveled by the cards along the path is the shortest distancebetween the cards in the card infeed tray 12 and the compartment 127 ofthe carousel 120. The length of this path traveled by the cards may beminimized to minimize the length of the card-handling device 10, and tomaximize the speed by which cards may be delivered from the card infeedtray 12 to the carousel 120.

When the card-handling device 10 is mounted on a gaming table such thatthe flange 30 is substantially flush with the upper gaming surface ofthe table, approximately the lower half of the carousel 120 may belocated beneath the table surface. As a result, the card-handling device10 may have a relatively low profile on the table.

With continued reference to FIG. 4A, the card-handling device 10 mayfurther include a carousel drive system configured to selectively driverotation of the carousel member about a shaft 121, by which the carousel120 is rotatably mounted to the frame 21. The shaft 121 may be mountedto the frame 21 by means of threaded hand screws or a locking releasablemechanism, which may provide for easy removal and replacement of thecarousel 120.

The carousel drive system may include, for example, a carousel drivemotor 126 that is mounted to the frame 21, as shown in FIG. 4A. FIG. 7is a view of a second, opposite side of the card-handling device shownin FIG. 4A. By way of example and not limitation, a pulley 130 may bemounted to a drive shaft 128 of the carousel drive motor 126 (FIG. 4A),and another pulley (not shown) may be mounted to a drive shaft 135. Anendless belt 132 may be provided around both the pulley 130 and thepulley mounted to the drive shaft 135. In this configuration, as thecarousel drive motor 126 drives rotation of the drive shaft 128, thedrive shaft 135 will also be rotationally driven by the carousel drivemotor 126 and endless belt 132. A pinion gear 136 also may be mounted tothe drive shaft 135. The pinion gear 136 may be sized, positioned, andotherwise configured to mesh with a toothed edge or surface 138 providedon the carousel 120. In this configuration, the carousel drive motor 126may be used to selectively drive rotation of the carousel 120 about theshaft 121 in either the clockwise or counterclockwise direction.

In additional embodiments of the present invention, the carousel drivesystem may include any means for driving rotation of the carousel 120including, for example, gears, sprockets, chains, belts, etc.

The carousel drive motor 126, which is used to selectively driverotation of the carousel 120, also may be operatively controlled by acontrol system 220, which is described in further detail below.

Referring again to FIG. 4A, the card-handling device 10 may furtherinclude a card output system 242 (FIG. 8) for moving cards out from thecarousel 120 or other card storage device and into the card output tray14. The card output system 242 (FIG. 8) may include, for example, anelongated swing arm 160 having a first lower end that is pivotallycoupled to the frame 21 using a pin member 162. The swing arm 160 may beconfigured to pivot about the pin member 162. The second upper end ofthe elongated swing arm 160 may be equipped or otherwise provide with aretractable inwardly projecting tab 163 (extending into the plane ofFIG. 4A) that is configured to extend into a compartment 127 of thecarousel 120 while the swing arm 160 is swinging toward the output tray14, but that retracts before and/or while the swing arm 160 swings backto a resting position in which the swing arm 160 is positioned near aninner circumference 164 of the compartments 127 of the carousel 120. Inthe extended position, the inwardly projecting tab 163 contacts anycards positioned within the aligned compartment 127 of the carousel 120.The inwardly projecting tab 163 of the swing arm 160 retracts as itcomes into contact with a stationary tab 182 mounted to the frame 21.

Referring to FIG. 4B, the card-handling device 10 may include a swingarm drive system, which may include a swing arm drive motor 166, anendless belt 168, a first idler pulley 170, and a second idler pulley172. The first idler pulley 170 and the second idler pulley 172 may bemounted to the frame 21. The endless belt 168 may extend around a pulley174 that is mounted to a drive shaft 176 of the swing arm drive motor166, the first idler pulley 170, and the second idler pulley 172. Theendless belt 168 is also securely attached to the swing arm 160 at alocation between the first idler pulley 170 and the second idler pulley172 using, for example, a clamp 178. In this configuration, the swingarm 160 may be selectively swung towards the card output tray 14 byselectively jogging the endless belt 168 around the pulleys 170, 172,174 in the clockwise direction in FIG. 4B using the swing arm drivemotor 166, and the swing arm 160 may be selectively swung away from thecard output tray 14 by selectively jogging the endless belt 168 aroundthe pulleys 170, 172, 174 in the counterclockwise direction in FIG. 4Busing the swing arm drive motor 166.

The swing arm drive motor 166, which is used to selectively move theswing arm 160, also may be operatively controlled by the control system220 subsequently described herein.

Referring to FIG. 4B, as the swing arm 160 is caused to swing towardsthe card output tray 14 and eject a card or cards out from a compartment127 of the carousel 120, the card may be at least partially forcedbetween a card output roller 186 and an opposing card output idlerroller 188. The card output roller 186 may be mounted on a shaft 187. Asshown in FIG. 7, a pulley 190 also may be mounted on the shaft 187, anda card output roller drive motor 192 that is attached to the frame 21may be used to drive rotation of the shaft 187 using an endless belt194. The endless belt 194 may extend around a pulley 190 mounted on theshaft 187 and another pulley 196 mounted on a drive shaft 193 of thecard output roller drive motor 192. In some embodiments of theinvention, intermeshing gears may be provided on both the shaft 187 ofthe card output roller 186 and a shaft 189 of the opposing card outputidler roller 188 to ensure that the card output roller 186 and opposingcard output idler roller 188 are driven in unison. In thisconfiguration, the card output roller drive motor 192 may be caused tospin the card output roller 186 and opposing card output idler roller188 as the swing arm 160 is caused to eject a card or cards out from acompartment 127 of the carousel 120 and force the card or cards betweenthe card output roller 186 and the opposing card output idler roller188. The rotation of the card output roller 186 and an opposing cardoutput idler roller 188 may force and advance the card or cardstherebetween into the card output tray 14, where the card or cards maybe accessible to a dealer or other user of the card-handling device 10.A sensor 200 (FIG. 4A) may be located and configured to sense or detectwhen no cards are present in the card output tray 14, and to convey suchinformation to the control system 220 subsequently described herein.

As shown in FIG. 7, one or more sensors 156 may also be provided andconfigured to detect a relative position of the carousel 120 so as toenable the control system 220 (FIG. 8) subsequently described herein toidentify which compartment 127 is aligned to receive a card from thecard infeed system 240 and which compartment 127 is aligned for ejectionof any cards therein by the card output system 242. By way of exampleand not limitation, the card-handling device 10 may include one magneticsensor 156 that is configured to detect a magnet 157 positioned on thecarousel 120, as shown in FIG. 7. The position of the carousel 120 whenthe magnet 157 is positioned adjacent the magnetic sensor 156 may bedesignated as a “home” position of the carousel 120. The card-handlingdevice 10 may be configured to position the carousel 120 in the homeposition when the card-handling device 10 is powered on. An encoder thatis associated with at least one of the carousel drive motor 126 or thecarousel 120 itself then may be used to keep track of the rotationalmovement of the carousel 120 from the home position, and the informationreceived from the encoder may be used by the control system 220 (FIG. 8)to identify the relative rotational position of the carousel 120 at anygiven time.

In the embodiment described above, the path each card travels as thecard moves from a selected compartment 127 of the carousel 120 into thecard output tray 14 (i.e., the card output path) is substantiallyhorizontal and above the path each card travels as the card moves fromthe card infeed tray 12 to a selected compartment 127 of the carousel120 (i.e., the card infeed path). In additional embodiments of thepresent invention, the card infeed path may be positioned verticallyabove the card output path. This vertical stacking or layering of thecard infeed path and the card output path allows both the card infeedtray 12 and the card output tray 12 to be positioned on the same side ofthe card-handling device 10 (relative to the carousel 120 or other cardstorage device). In yet additional embodiments, the card infeed path andthe card output path may be disposed in substantially the same plane andlaterally side by side one another.

Referring to FIGS. 4A and 4B, in embodiments of the present invention,the card-handling device 10 further includes a card sensing system (alsoreferred to as a card recognition system) that is configured to sense atleast one identifying characteristic or feature (also referred to ascard information) of each card before the card is placed into acompartment 127 of the carousel 120 or other card storage device. By wayof example and not limitation, the card recognition system may include acard sensor 210 that is configured to identify at least a rank (e.g., 2,3, 4 . . . 10, jack, queen, king, ace) and suit (e.g., spade, club,diamond, heart) of a conventional playing card. The sensor 210 may beconfigured and positioned, for example, to detect the rank and suit ofeach card as the card passes between the previously described firstdrive system and second drive system of the card infeed system 240 (FIG.8) (e.g., as the card passes between the second advancing roller 56 andthe third advancing roller 72), as shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B. Of course,those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the sensor 210may be placed at other suitable locations along the path the cardtravels within the card-handling device 10.

By way of example and not limitation, the card recognition system mayinclude a two-dimensional image sensor comprising, for example, a cameradevice that includes a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)image sensor or a charge-coupled device (CCD) image sensor. For example,the card recognition system may include a video camera imaging system asdescribed (or substantially similar to that described) in U.S. patentapplication Ser. No. 10/623,223, filed Jul. 17, 2003 (which waspublished Apr. 8, 2004 as U.S. Patent Publication No. US2004/0067789A1),the disclosures of each of which are incorporated herein in theirentirety by this reference. As described therein, one suitable cardrecognition system comprises the camera sold under the trademark“DRAGONFLY®” and available from Point Grey Research Inc. of Vancouver,British Columbia, Canada. The DRAGONFLY® camera includes a 6-pinIEEE-1394 interface, and an asynchronous trigger. This camera can beused to acquire images using multiple frame rates, to acquire 640×480 or1024×724 24-bit true color images, or to acquire 8-bit gray scaleimages. Furthermore, the DRAGONFLY® camera is typically provided withimage acquisition software and exhibits plug-and-play capability. Such acommercially available camera may be combined with commerciallyavailable symbol recognition software, which may be executed using anexternal computer (not shown). Such commercially available imagerecognition software may be “trained” to identify conventional playingcard symbols and to classify and report each acquired image pattern as aspecific card suit and rank. The graphics used to identify rank and suitof each card are not identical or standard and may vary between decks ofcards. Once an image recognition software program for identifying rankand suit has been developed, the software program may be configured toallow the software program to be trained for each particular deck ofcards to be handled by the card-handling device 10 to enable thesoftware program to accurately identify rank and suit of the particularcards used. Such training of the software program may be done at thecasino table or by a security team before the card-handling device 10 isplaced on a table.

As yet another example, the sensor 210 may include a one-dimensionalimage sensor such as a line scanning system or device that includes acontact image sensor (CIS), as disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser.No. 11/152,475, filed Jun. 13, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,769,232, issuedAug. 3, 2010, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/417,894, filed May3, 2006, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,593,544, issued Sep. 22, 2009, thedisclosures of each of which are incorporated herein in their entiretyby this reference. Such line scanning systems may operate in conjunctionwith additional card position sensors. Sensors that may be used toidentify a card position at the time a line scan is performed by theline scanning system are commercially available. Such line scanningsystems may be small enough to be entirely incorporated into thecard-handling device 10 without requiring used of an external computerfor executing an image recognition software program.

The sensor signals may be processed by a separate hardware element (notshown) such as a Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) or an ApplicationSpecific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) using the methodology described inU.S. Patent Publication US 2005/0242500 A1, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,769,232,issued, Aug. 3, 2010, the content of which is incorporated by referenceherein. Alternatively, the sensor signals may be processed by aprocessor 222 (FIG. 8) within the card-handling device 10 or by anexternal computer system, such as, for example, a table manager 450(FIG. 10).

In some applications, the cards to be handled by the card-handlingdevice 10 may be standard unmarked conventional cards, and the sensor210 may be configured to sense and identify only a conventional rank andsuit of each card. In additional applications, the cards to be handledby the card-handling device 10 may be marked with ultraviolet (UV),infrared (IR), near infrared (near-IR), or visible wavelength inks ormay have embedded radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, magneticcoding, bar codes, embedded electronic devices, or any other markingmeans, and the sensor 210 may be configured to detect at least one suchmarking in addition to, or instead of, identifying a rank and suit ofeach card. The card recognition system also may be configured to sense,detect, and identify cards that have been physically damaged (e.g., dueto wear) and/or cards that have been marked in any way that facilitatescheating. The card recognition system may be configured to sense andidentify cards that include one or more of cuts, abrasions, bends, dirt,debris, and/or to verify that each card exhibits an expected, predefinedcolor, thickness, reflectivity, mass, or other identifyingcharacteristic or feature.

The card recognition system may be configured to communicateelectrically with the subsequently described control system. Inaddition, multiple sensors 210 may be useful for redundancy, betteroverall image fidelity, or simply for advantageous placement of the typeof sensor. For example, a 2-dimensional sensor may be more practical ina position where it may read the card in a stationary position. On theother hand, the CIS module may be more practical in a position where itreads the card while it is in motion to enable the line scans at variouspositions along the rank and suit designators on the card.

The card-handling device 10 may further include a control system 220.The control system may configured to receive input signals from a user,to receive input signals from one or more of the various sensorsdescribed herein, and/or for selectively controlling one or more of thevarious previously described active components of the card-handlingdevice 10.

FIG. 8 is a schematic block diagram of one example of a control system220 that may be used with the card-handling device 10 shown in FIG. 1 tocreate a card-handling and analysis system 250. In some embodiments, theentire control system 220 may be physically located within thecard-handling device 10. In other embodiments, one or more components ofthe control system 220 may be physically located outside thecard-handling device 10. Such components may include, for example, acomputer device (e.g., a desktop computer, a laptop computer, a handheldcomputer (e.g., personal data assistant (PDA), network server, etc.).Such external components may be configured to perform functions such as,for example, image processing, bonus system management, networkcommunication and the like.

As shown in FIG. 8, the control system 220 may include at least oneprocessor 222 (e.g., a microprocessor or microcontroller). The controlsystem 220 also may include memory 224 for storing information such assoftware and data to be read or written by the processor 222. Thecontrol system 220 also may include one or more input devices 226 andone or more output devices 228. By way of example and not limitation,the one or more input devices 226 may include a keypad, a keyboard, atouchpad, a button, a switch, a lever, and the like. An input device 226may include an authorization element. An authorization element may beused to limit access to some of the functions, such as, for example,recalling the content of current or past hands. As a non-limitingexample, authorization element input device 226 may be configured toread the information on a magnetic card strip and send that informationto the control system 220. The information on a magnetic card strip mayinclude a user identification. The control system 220 can verify thatthe card information belongs to a database of authorized users. Othernon-limiting examples of authorization elements include a fingerprintscan, a Radio Frequency Identifier (RFID) scan, and a retina scan. Ageneral security element for identifying an authorized user may includeone or more authorization elements or it may include one or moreauthorization elements in combination with the entry of a password bythe authorized user.

The authorization element input device 226 may be integrated as a partof the control system 220 or it may be configured as a stand-alonedevice in communication with the control system 220 across a wired orwireless communication medium.

The one or more output devices 228 may include a graphical display 230(i.e., a screen or monitor), a printer, one or more light-emittingdiodes (LEDs), a device for emitting an audible signal, etc. In someembodiments of the present invention, the input devices 226 and theoutput devices 228 may be integrated into a single unitary structure,such as, for example, with the display 230 configured as a touch screendisplay 230.

The touch screen display 230 may be located below the gaming tablesurface when the card-handling device 10 is mounted to a gaming table inthe manner previously described herein. The display 230 may be used tooutput information to a dealer or other user regarding information suchas the identity of the cards that have been dealt into each hand, whichmay allow the dealer to assess whether the cards shown or played by thatplayer are different (indicating that the cards have been changed orswapped) without alerting the player. For example, if a deviationbetween a dealt hand and a displayed or played hand were to occur,indicating a confirmed case of card switching, the dealer would be ableto notify security without the player's knowledge, which may allow thecheating player to be apprehended. By providing or locating the display230 below the surface of the table and/or facing away from the playersat the table, the display 230 may be concealed to the players, andimportant information may be conveyed to and from casino personnelwithout the knowledge of the players. Touch screen controls on thedisplay 230 also may provide a larger number of input options for theuser, as compared to more standard push button controls. The display 230may be capable of displaying alphanumeric information, graphicalinformation, animation, video feed, and the like.

As another input option, the touch screen may be used to present logininformation for an authorized user. Such information may include a useridentification, a password, or a combination thereof. As a non-limitingexample, the touch screen may prompt a user to enter a useridentification and a password. As another non-limiting example, thepresentation and acceptance of login information may be used incombination with the authorization element input device 226 such thatthe user identification is received from the magnetic card or otherauthorization element and the password is entered by the authorizeduser. In this combination, the database of authorized users may bechecked to determine that the entered password corresponds with the useridentification on the magnetic strip.

As another non-limiting example, the control system 220 may beconfigured with a factory default password. After entry of the factorydefault password, custom password information may be entered, such as,for example, to create authorized user passwords. In some embodiments,the default password may only allow access to operations for enteringthe custom passwords. In these embodiments, entry of a custom passwordmay be required to access hand information.

As shown in FIG. 8, the control system 220 may be configured tocommunicate with each of the previously described card infeed system240, card output system 242, temporary card storage system 244 ordevice, and card recognition system 246. In this configuration, thecontrol system 220 may be configured to receive input signals from adealer or other user, signals from the various sensors of thecard-handling device 10, and to coordinate and control operation of thecard infeed system 240, the card output system 242, the temporary cardstorage system 244, and the card recognition system 246 so as to performvarious card-handling operations such as, for example, shuffling ofcards placed in the card infeed tray, sorting cards placed in the cardinfeed tray, and/or forming and sequentially dispensing playing handsfrom cards placed in the card infeed tray.

The control system 220 may be configured to communicate across any wiredor wireless communication medium 380 to a network 440. By way ofexample, and not limitation, communication media may include serial datalinks, parallel data links, Ethernet, a Wide Area Network (WAN), a LocalArea Network (LAN), BLUETOOTH®, Wi-Fi, WiMax, and other suitablecommunications links. In some embodiments, communication on thecommunication medium may be implemented with a substantially stand-alonehardware element (not shown). In other embodiments, the communicationmay be accomplished with a combination of hardware andfirmware/software.

The network 440 also may be used to collect and/or process data fromother data collection devices on a gaming table such as, for example,radio frequency identification (RFID) wager amount sensors, objectsensors, chip tray inventory sensors, and the like, as is explained morefully below in the description of FIG. 10. Data may be collected by thecontrol system 220 and sent to a remote database for later analysis andprocessing, or the data may be analyzed in real time.

The processors 222 may be implemented as microcontrollers includingmemory for storage of data and firmware/software for execution thereon.The processors 222 also may be implemented as microprocessors withseparate memory 224 for storage of the data and firmware/software. Inaddition, the processors 222 may incorporate an ASIC, Field-ProgrammableGate Array (FPGA), multiple Programmable Logic Devices (PLD), andcombinations thereof.

In some embodiments, the processors 222 may be configured as twoseparate processors configured to perform different functions. A firstprocessor may be configured for operating and controlling the functionsof the shuffler, including operation of electrical devices such asmotors, controlling the images displayed on the display 230, processingsignals received from all internal sensors such as optical objectpresence sensors, motion sensors and the like. Thus, during operation,the first processor 222 may determine the random order in which cardsare loaded into the compartments of the card-handling device 10.

The first processor may also control the display 230 including touchscreen controls and may be configured as a further user interface forprogramming the processors to display additional game names and todispense cards according to user inputted data.

A second processor (not shown) may be used to interpret informationreceived from the card recognition system 246 to determine rank, suit,other card information, or combinations thereof. The first processor andthe second processor may communicate with each other and collaborate sothat the identity of each card and the compartment in which it is placedare associated.

Of course, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that withmultiple processors 222, the task load may be allocated differentlydepending on performance characteristics and features of each of theprocessors 222. For example, a microcontroller may include features wellsuited for controlling and interfacing with external devices and amicroprocessor may be well suited for performing signal processingfunctions such as image recognition.

In operation of embodiments of the present invention, the dealer will“deal” the hands from the card output tray to each player, such as in apreset order or by player position. Thus, embodiments of the presentinvention can track the cards from the shuffler to the player todetermine the contents of each player's hand. In other words, throughdata manipulation, information relating to the content of each hand theshuffler dispenses is formed and is retrievable. The informationcollected from the card-handling device may be time stamped and storedaccordingly. Moreover, this information may be stored internally on thecard-handling device or on an external computer to provide a recallfeature for any hand during a number of completed rounds of play. Insome embodiments, a large database outside the shuffler may bemaintained so that more history of hands dealt can be stored and laterretrieved or analyzed.

As shown in FIG. 8, and as was described earlier, in some embodiments ofthe present invention, the card recognition system 246 may include aseparate controller 212 (e.g., a separate signal processor, such as, forexample, an FPGA for receiving signals from the sensor 210 (e.g., cameradevice or line scanning device)) to determine rank and/or suit of eachcard being read or sensed by the card recognition system 246. Inadditional embodiments, such functions may be performed by the processor222 of the control system 220, or the controller 212 may be a separatecontroller that is integrated with the control system 220 and locatedremote from the sensor 210.

The control system 220 of the card-handling device 10 may be configuredunder control of a computer program to enable a dealer or other user ofthe card-handling device 10 to perform any one of a number of functionsor operations on a deck of cards using the card-handling device 10. Thedisplay 230 (or other input device) of the card-handling device 10 mayinclude a menu that allows the dealer or other user to select whatfunctions or operations the card-handling device 10 is to perform on adeck of cards placed in the card infeed tray 12. The functions oroperations may include one or more of shuffling operations, sortingoperations, and dealing operations, and recall of card information fromvarious hands, rounds, or combinations thereof, as will be explainedmore fully below.

By way of example and not limitation, one function or operation that maybe performed by the card-handling device 10 is a shuffling operationthat includes a deck shuffle with the entire shuffled deck output to thecard output tray 14. In other words, the control system 220 of thecard-handling device 10 may be configured under control of a program tocause the card-handling device 10 to randomly shuffle an entire deck ofcards placed in the card infeed tray 12, and to dispense the entire deckof shuffled cards into the card output tray 14.

By way of example and not limitation, the card-handling device 10 may beused to shuffle cards placed in the card infeed tray 12, the controlsystem 220 of the card-handling device 10 may be configured to read orsense one or more identifying characteristics or features of each cardas the card is carried past the card recognition system 246, aspreviously described herein, and to randomly rotate the carousel 120while inserting the cards to insert cards sequentially into the nextcompartment 127 of the carousel 120. After all the cards have beenrandomly placed into compartments 127 of the carousel 120, the controlsystem 220 may cause the carousel 120 to spin or rotate in a step-wisemotion as the card output system 242 ejects cards out from thecompartments 127 of the carousel 120 either randomly or sequentially. Inother words, the cards may be placed in a randomized or shuffledsequence as they are placed into the carousel 120. In this manner, thecards or groups of cards may be provided in the card output tray 14 in arandom, shuffled sequence.

Yet another function or operation that may be performed by thecard-handling device 10 is a dealing operation that includes asequential output of randomly generated playing hands (or other subsetsof cards) to the card output tray 14, each hand or subset of cardscomprising a predetermined number of cards. In other words, the controlsystem 220 of the card-handling device 10 may be configured undercontrol of a program to cause the card-handling device 10 to dispense afirst randomly generated playing hand or subset into the card outputtray 14. A second randomly generated playing hand may be output to thecard output tray 14 after the control system 220 receives a signal fromthe sensor 200 indicating that the first randomly generated playing handhas been removed from the card output tray 14. This process may continueuntil a selected number of randomly generated playing hands has beendispensed and removed from the card output tray 14. If the game beingplayed requires other sets of playing cards, such as, for example, a setof flop cards, dealer cards, common cards, extra player cards, etc.,such sets of cards also may be generated and dispensed into the cardoutput tray 14 in the sequential manner described above to prevent thesets of cards from being mixed with other playing hands or sets ofcards. After the last playing hand or set is delivered, any cards fromthe deck or decks that remain in compartments 127 of the carousel 120may be automatically unloaded to the card output tray 14, or theremaining cards may be unloaded to the card output tray 14 uponreceiving an input signal from the dealer or other user (for example, aninput signal generated by touching a predefined button on the touchpaddisplay 230).

In some embodiments of the present invention, the control system 220(FIG. 8) of the card-handling device 10 may be programmed to handle aparticular deck of cards, such as, for example, a conventional deck of52 playing cards comprising suits of spades, clubs, diamonds, andhearts, each suit comprising cards ranking 2, 3, 4 . . . 10, jack,queen, king, and ace. By way of example and not limitation, when such adeck of cards is placed into and detected within the card infeed tray 12of the card-handling device 10, the control system 220 (FIG. 8) may beconfigured under control of a program to electronically generate arandom or shuffled sequence of the deck, and to identify the playinghands (or other subsets of playing cards) that would be generated anddealt if the electronically shuffled deck of cards were actuallyphysically dealt to the players (and the dealer himself) by the dealer.The control system 220 then may assign one compartment 127 of thecarousel 120 to each of those hands or subsets of playing cards (whichmay be referred to as “hand compartments.”) Then, as the cards are fedinto the card-handling device 10 and identified by the card recognitionsystem 246, the control system 220 may cause the carousel 120 toselectively rotate such that any cards corresponding to the hands orsubsets are placed within the corresponding hand compartments 127 of thecarousel 120. Other cards not corresponding to hands or subsets of cardsmay be placed in one or more of the other compartments 127 of thecarousel 120 not designated as hand compartments. The control system 220then may cause the card output system to dispense the first hand orsubset of cards within the first hand compartment 127 into the cardoutput tray 14. After the dealer has removed the first hand from thecard output tray 14 and given that hand to the corresponding firstplayer, the control system 220 then may cause the card output system todispense the second hand or subset of cards within the second handcompartment 127 into the card output tray 14. This process may continueuntil a selected number of randomly generated playing hands has beendispensed and removed from the card output tray 14 and dealt to thetable.

The display 230 may include a touch screen or other user controls thatmay be used to program the control system 220 of the card-handlingdevice 10. For example, the card-handling device 10 may be programmed tosequentially deliver a specified number of hands each comprising aspecified number of players. Furthermore, the card-handling device 10may be programmed to deliver a specified number of cards to a dealer, aspecified number of flop cards, a bonus hand, common cards, or any othercard or cards used in the play of a casino card game. The touch screenor other user controls of the display 230 also may be used to input aname of a game for which the card-handling device has been programmed,so that the name of the programmed game appears on the display 230 in amenu of user selectable games. By employing a control system 220 that isprogrammable by an end user as described herein, the need for factoryprogramming or re-programming of the card-handling device 10 every timea new casino card game is developed may be eliminated, which may savetime, eliminate the need for re-submission of software to various gamingagencies for approval before implementation in a casino, and eliminatethe need for upgrading software in the field.

By way of example and not limitation, the card-handling device 10 may beprogrammed by an end user to deliver cards in a pattern or sequencecorresponding to the game of THREE CARD POKER™, which requires that theplayers and dealer each receive three cards. If a new game that utilizesthree player cards (each) and three dealer cards were to be developed inthe future, and end user would be able to input information includingthe new game name into the card-handling device 10 and the card-handlingdevice 10 would be configured for playing such a game without requiringa software change.

As shown in FIG. 9, and also with reference to FIG. 8, the display 230may be configured to display an image of a game table 405 with variousplayer positions 425, such as the THREE CARD POKER™ game layoutconfiguration.

In one embodiment with a touch screen display 230, the card-handling andanalysis system 250 may be configured such that the user may touch aregion near a specific player position 425 and the display 230 maydisplay card information 230A for the hand at that specific playerposition 425. Alternatively, each of the player positions 425 maydisplay the card information of the hand at each player position 425.

As a non-limiting example, the content of the graphic may include thename of the game, player positions, dealer position, and even gamerules. A user may touch a specific player position that is displayed onthe touch screen to reveal the hand to which this position was dealt.The display may also show the result of the game, and the associatedpayouts, for example, a flush on “Three Card Poker” table may pay 5 to1.

As another non-limiting example, the touch screen display content mayinclude navigation buttons such as “past rounds,” “current round,”played hands,” “unused hands,” “back,” “forward,” and “exit.” The Playedhands button may be used to display the hands that were actually dealtand bet upon in the current or a previous round. Similarly the unusedhands button may be used to display hands that may have been processedby the shuffler but never used in a round of play.

As non-limiting examples, the back button and forward button may be usedto navigate among unused hands or played hands. Similarly, the backbutton and forward button may be used to navigate among previouslyplayed rounds that are stored in a database of rounds.

FIG. 10 is a block diagram of an integrated monitoring system 400 (alsoreferred to as a table management system) used to monitor a gaming table405 (shown in FIG. 7). The integrated monitoring system 400 includes acard-handling and analysis system 250 coupled to a table manager 450through a local table network 440. Some embodiments of the integratedmonitoring system 400 may also include one or more table image units 420and object recognition device 430 (e.g., chip readers) coupled to thetable manager 450 through the local table network 440. The table manager450 may be coupled to a server (not shown) through a communicationnetwork 460. By way of example, and not limitation, the communicationnetwork 460 may be configured to couple multiple table managers 450 to acentral database or server by creating a network for a specific pitarea, a specific casino floor area, or the entire casino.

The overhead imaging equipment and other hardware and/or software isused to extract game information from a live gaming table. Data from theoverhead imaging equipment may be processed to extract game playinformation. Non-limiting examples of game play information include butare not limited to: player position occupied, wager placed at a givenplayer position, movement of a card or group of cards from a shuffler(or card-reading shoe) to a player position, movement of a card or cardsto a common card area, movement of a card or cards to a dealer cardarea, movement of a card or cards to a bonus card area, placement of aside wager, withdrawal of a wager, rolling of a dice, spinning of awheel, moving of cards from one area to another area on the table, thecollection of cards at the conclusion of a round of play, dealer handsignals, the payment of payouts and the taking of lost wagers, etc.

U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/558,810, filed Nov. 10, 2006, andtitled “Casino Table Game Monitoring System,” pending, describescomprehensive card game monitoring systems, including suitable hardwareand software for performing the overhead imaging function. Data such asthe card composition (for games dealt—face up) and wager informationfrom such a system is collected and used in combination with the handcomposition information derived from the card-reading system ofshufflers of the present invention to form data records of historicalhand composition for a given player position. The content of thisapplication is incorporated by reference in its entirety.

Card composition data from the overhead imaging system may be comparedto the card composition information collected in the shuffler todetermine if illegal card swapping has occurred. The data from theoverhead imaging system can also be used to associate the hand with aparticular player position on the table. Additionally, data from theoverhead system may be used to verify a hand composition prior to makinga large payout.

The combined data may be stored in memory associated with a processorwithin the card shuffler or transmitted via a hardwire, wireless ornetwork connection to an external database. In one example of theinvention, a finite number of hands (i.e., 8-10) per player position isstored in the internal memory of the shuffler and can be displayed onthe display associated with the shuffler. Any information that is notstored in the shuffler memory may be instead stored in the externaldatabase of an external computer and may be displayed on a displayassociated with the external computer. In some embodiments, theinformation stored in the external database may be recalled anddisplayed using the user inputs of the shuffler, allowing the previouslystored information to be displayed on the shuffler display.

A layout of a blackjack table 405 is shown as a non-limiting example ofanother possible casino table game to which embodiments of the presentinvention may be applied. The layout illustrates one contemplated,suitable arrangement of elements of the integrated monitoring system 400in accordance with an embodiment of the invention. The integratedmonitoring system 400 may include many components for determiningvarious forms of information about the game being played at the table405, the players playing the game, wager amounts and payouts, and thedealer responsible for the game. As is described below in more detail,the information may be captured, processed, and acted upon (e.g.,generation of alerts) in substantially real time.

In system 400, the table 405 is used for blackjack and is equipped withthe card-handling and analysis system 250 (FIG. 8) described earlier.The card-handling and analysis system 250 with display 230 is configuredfor communications via communication medium 380 and the local tablenetwork 440 with the table manager 450. The system 400 may include anobject recognition device 430. As one example of an object recognitiondevice 430, FIG. 10 illustrates object recognition devices 430 that maybe configured as Radio Frequency Identifier (RFID) antennas/transmittersfor each wagering area. In an embodiment with RFID transmitters 430 andRFID tagged chips (not shown), the RFID transmitters 430 are locatedwithin or underneath the table 405. The RFID antennas/transmittersrespectively read the values of the game chips and then transmit thechip information to the table manager 450 via the communication medium380 and local table network 440. U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,651,548 and 5,735,742describe RFID chips and chip reading systems that may be used as thegame chips and RFID transmitters 430. Although not shown, the RFIDtransmitters 430 may be configured to extend into an insurance area 435of the table 405 to obtain the chip values of insurance wagers. Inanother embodiment, additional individual RFID transmitters connected tothe communication medium 380 may be placed in the insurance area 435,one RFID transmitter associated with each player wagering area.

The system 400 may also include overhead cameras 420 (also referred toas image units) connected to a ceiling of the casino, mounted on a poleto the table, or in the vicinity of the table 405. These cameras 420process the images received by the cameras 420 respectively andcommunicate with the table manager 450 over the communication media andthe local table network 440.

The table manager 450 processes, and may transmit, images of itemsviewed by the cameras 420 in substantially near real time. Dealt cardvalues, wagers, and other table activity can be imaged and determinedusing the cameras 420 in cooperation with the table manager 450. Thetable manager 450 may be implemented as a general-purpose computersystem, a server, or other processor system as is generally known in theart. The table manager 450 will contain computer implemented processingthat may be stored on a computer-readable medium of the general-purposecomputer system. As such, the processing and functions of the tablemanager 450 may be stored as a computer program on a computer-readablemedium, or downloaded from the server (not shown) over the communicationnetwork 460.

As can been seen from FIG. 10, the cameras 420 are positioned to achievea full view of the gaming table surface, and may be positioned to givethe best vantage point for the desired application. An optical ormagnetic synchronizing sensor can be used to detect the presence of anobject on the gaming surface of the table 405. The sensor, if used, mayactivate the cameras 420 and trigger image acquisition. The images areprocessed and transmitted to the table manager 450.

As with the control system 220 (FIG. 8) of the card-handling device 10(FIG. 1), the integrated monitoring system 400 may be configured with anauthorization element input device (not shown). As a non-limitingexample, the authorization element may be in communication with thetable manager 450. Thus, in the integrated monitoring system 400, thetable manager 450 may be configured for handling the authorizationprocess of gathering a user identification, a password, or a combinationthereof. The result of the authorization process may then be sent to thecard-handling and analysis system 250.

FIG. 11 is a flow diagram of a method of recognizing card informationand maintaining a play history in accordance with embodiments of thepresent invention. Many of the operations illustrated in FIG. 11 may beperformed anywhere within the process and are shown in the sequentialorder of FIG. 11 only for ease of description. At operation 502 thecards are moved from the infeed of the card-handling device and throughat least part of the card-handling device. At operation 504, the cardrecognition system identifies information for each card as it movesthrough the card-handling device or at some specific location within thecard-handling device. Any suitable location within the card-handlingdevice may be used as long as the card information collected may beassociated with a specific card and a specific hand or group of cards.

Operation 506 indicates that the card information from the cardrecognition system may be analyzed to determine card features, such as,for example, rank and suit, and the card information is stored in thecontrol system.

Decision block 510 determines whether another card should be processedfor the current round. If so, control returns to operation 504 toprocess the next card. If after loading and the proper number of cardsare present for the current round, control continues on to operation511. The loop controlled by decision block 510 may be used, as anon-limiting example, to process each card in a standard 52 card deck toverify that the deck is complete. This may be done by comparing the rankand suit of each card with a library of stored information. If a card ismissing from the deck, the rank and suit of that card may be displayedand the shuffle may be aborted.

In other words, as each card is processed by the device, a processor (orprocess) associated with controlling the card-handling device can trackwhere each card that is handled ends up in the carousel 120 (FIG. 4A).In addition, another processor (or another process) can keep track ofthe card information for each card. As a result, the loop controlled bydecision block 510 can verify a full deck is present based on the cardinformation (e.g., rank and suit).

At this point, some embodiments may maintain the process of identifyingwhich card went where in the carousel separate from the process ofidentifying the card information for each card. As a non-limitingexample, suppose the cards are numbered sequentially with a card numberas they are delivered to the carousel. The first process may track therandom distribution of cards. For example, the first process could trackthat card 1 is delivered to compartment 8, card 2 is delivered tocompartment 3, card 3 is delivered to compartment 1, and so on. Thesecond process may track that card 1 is a two of diamonds, card 2 is aking of clubs, card 3 is a five of hearts and so on. With this tracking,as a security feature, the overall process 500 may not know completeinformation about what each hand contains. Rather, one process may knowthat a hand contains delivered cards 3, 8, and 51. The other process mayknow the specific rank and suit of each card in the sequence of cardnumbers.

After completion of verification of the deck and recording of cardinformation for each sequential card, control passes to operation block511.

In operation block 511 the card information for each sequential card maybe associated with the hand information of which card numbers are inwhich compartments of the carousel. In other words, as a non-limitingexample, the information that compartment four contains cards 3, 8 and51 is combined with the information that card 3 is a queen of hearts,card 8 is a ten of clubs, and card 51 is a nine of spades.

Some embodiments may perform this operation of associating the handinformation with the card information as late as possible in the roundto prevent cheating where the information may be known before the handsare actually dealt to the players. Thus, the association may be made atdifferent point in execution of playing the round, such as, for example,after the hands are complete in the carousel, as a hand as it is removedfrom the card-handling device, as a hand is placed in a player position,or after all hands have been dealt.

In other embodiments of the invention, instead of associating the cardinformation of all cards with all the card numbers, the associationprocess may only be performed for the card information associated withcards that are dealt into compartments forming hands. The rank/suitinformation of the unused cards (i.e., the cards that go into discardcompartments) may not be matched up.

In still other embodiments, the card information may be associateddirectly with the compartment number rather than keeping track of thecard information and hand information separate. Either way, after allcards have been distributed, the hand compositions are known by theprocessor. As a matter of design choice, this information is notviewable to the end user until after the cards have been distributedinto the delivery tray.

Optional operation 512 indicates that the hand positions may beidentified for the hands before, after, or when they are dealt from thecard-handling device. If the embodiment is configured with an objectrecognition device, the hand position may be determined based on activeplayer positions as is described above with reference to FIG. 10.

Operation 514 indicates that all card information and player positioninformation may be stored for the entire round after the round iscomplete. As a non-limiting example, such information may include, thetype of game, player position, card rank and suit of each card in eachplayer position's hand, size of bet at each player position, andanticipated payout based on the rules.

Decision block 516 indicates whether a query is made for historyinformation. This history information may include card information andplayer position information for the current round or for past, completedrounds. If display of history information is desired, operation 518displays the desired information. Otherwise, control transfers todecision 520. The display information may include a display of all handsfor the current round or only hands at active player positions.Furthermore, the display may be configured to display a single player'scurrent hand or past hands.

In some embodiments, the display may display the card information bypresenting some type of graphical representation or symbol for the cardinformation such as rank and suit. In other embodiments, all or part ofa stored image of the card may be displayed rather than just the rankand suit symbols. For example, a graphic image of a one-eyed Jack ofdiamonds can be displayed rather than a “J” and a diamond symbol. In apreferred embodiment, only a portion of the graphic image is displayed(e.g., 25% of the card face).

In addition, the shuffler or an external game controller incommunication with the shuffler processor may be programmed with thegame rules such that the shuffler can display the game resultinformation or send data to an external display. In a preferred format,the game rules are programmed into the shuffler processor such that thewinning hand can be identified on the shuffler display. Even if anexternal processor determines a game result, the data can be transmittedback to the shuffler so that the game outcome can be displayed on theshuffler display and so that the display can indicate to the dealer whoshould be paid and the correct payment amount.

Decision 520 indicates whether another round is desired; if so, controltransfers back to operation 502, otherwise, control transfers tooperation 522. Optional operation 522 indicates that the historyinformation gathered and stored in the control system 220 (FIG. 8) ortable manager (FIG. 10) may be transferred to another computer forarchiving or additional processing. As a non-limiting example, thecontrol system may include a history of about 10 rounds. If the controlsystem is in communication with an external computer, the control systemmay send the round information for rounds older than the past 10 roundsto the external computer. Otherwise, the control system may simply dropoff the oldest round beyond the 10th round.

Optional operation 524 indicates that additional processing on thehistory may be performed. Additional processing may include, asnon-limiting examples, review of the history in an attempt to finddealer errors, cheating, and statistical review of the history to findbetting patterns or to verify randomness of the game. Furthermore, thisadditional processing may be performed on an external computer, thetable manager 450 (FIG. 10) or the control system 220 (FIG. 8). In oneembodiment, historical hand composition information is stored withincontrol system 220, and is accessible by the user by inputting a requeston user input device 226. A touch screen display 230 displays historicalhand information upon request. In one embodiment, multiple historicalhand compositions for each player position are viewable.

In another embodiment, historical hand composition information is storedon table manager 450 (e.g., controller) and is displayed on either aseparate monitor 451 or on the shuffler display 230.

In some embodiments, a shuffler may be configured to deliver no morehands or other card combinations (such as dealer hands, community cards,bonus hands, bonus cards, etc.) than is necessary to administer thegame. For games that do not require the dealer to deal hands to alltable positions (regardless of whether there is an active player), theshuffler may receive a signal from the wager sensors (or other sensordenoting an active player position) and limits the hand output to onlywhat is necessary to administer the game. As a non-limiting example, ifthere are only two players, the shuffler will sense that state anddeliver only two hands.

FIG. 12 shows another embodiment of a table manager 450 that managesplay of a game being played remotely from the table by a player using acomputing device 600. The table manager 450 in this embodiment providesthe player at the computing device 600 with a video feed of a dealer 610dealing the game from a card handling system 250 and enables the playerto interact with a live table of the game without being physicallypresent at the table. The table 405 in this embodiment includes acard-handling and analysis system 250 that includes card shufflingcapabilities as described above as well as a card recognition system 246that identifies the suit and rank of cards dispensed from the cardhandling system 250. The table 405 also includes a camera 620 and amicrophone 625. The camera and microphone are positioned to capturevideo and audio signals of the game play. The table includes a play area630 for dealing cards for play of the game. The camera 620 captures theplay of the game on the play area 630 as well as the dealer 610 and cardhandling system 250, while the microphone 625 captures any interactionprovided by the dealer 610 during play of the game, such as prompts toany players, instructions on the game, and any social interactions. Thecard handling system 250, camera 620, and microphone 625 are operativelyconnected to the table manager 450 and communicate information andreceive commands from the table manager 450.

The table 405 also includes a dealer display 640 and a player actionindicator 650. The dealer display 640 displays information to the dealerrelated to the play of the game, for example administration of the game.Examples of displayed information include identifying the player whoseaction it is, the number of players in the game, or a subsequent actionfor the dealer to perform (e.g., deal a card to player 3, or revealcards to conclude a round). The dealer display 640 is typically locatednear camera 620, such as above or below the camera, such that while thedealer 610 views and receives information about the game, the dealer isalso able to interact with the camera 620.

The table 405 in one embodiment also includes a player action indicator650. One player action indicator 650 may be included for each playerposition in the game, for example on a gaming table. For example, theplayer action indicator 650 may be an additional display or indicator ata player's position indicating a user's action in a round. For example,in blackjack the indicator may indicate the player wishes to hit orstand. The player action indicator 650 may also include a textualreadout indicating a player's name or username associated with thatposition. The dealer display 640 and player action indicator 650 areoperatively connected to the table manager 450 and receive commands fromthe table manager 450. The table manager 405 is coupled to the variousdevices at the table 405 through any suitable communication means, suchas a local area network using a wired or wireless protocol. In someembodiments, the table manager 450 is also a part of the table 405.

The table manager 450 controls the operation of the game play byproviding a video and audio feed to the computing device 600 andproviding player actions to the dealer 610. The table manager 450 is incommunication with the computing device 600 and transmits, receives, andupdates game and wagering information as each round of a game progressesand is concluded.

The table manager 450 also receives the card information from the cardhandling system 250 and associates the cards from the card handlingsystem 250 with the appropriate hands of the game. In some embodiments,the processing system of the card handling system 250 collects handinformation as hands are formed in compartments, and prior to deliveryof a hand of cards to an output tray. The hand information may beretained in memory associated with the card handling system 250, or inmemory associated with the table manager 450 or in another memory deviceassociated with the system. In other embodiments, cards may be read asindividual cards are being delivered to a delivery tray. For exampleU.S. Pat. No. 6,698,756, the content of which is hereby incorporated byreference in its entirety describes a shuffler structure that capturesimages of cards as hands of cards are formed in the tray. This structurecould be adapted to extract rank and suit information from the cards andstore hand data for use in the disclosed system. As described above, thetable manager 450 determines player hands based on cards dealt by thecard handling system 250. The hand information may be determined fromreceiving the information from the processing system of the cardhandling system 250, or the hand information may be determined fromreceiving card information and associating the card information with ahand in the table manager 450.

Since in many games the order of cards dealt is defined by the rules ofthe game, the table manager 450 may use the game rules to determine theappropriate player, player position or other game entity with which toassociate the card. For example, if an initial card in a game is alwaysdiscarded, or a “burn” card, the table manager 450 associates the firstreceived card from the card handling system 250 with a discard. If thesecond card is associated with a first player's hand according to thegame rules, the second received card is associated with the firstplayer's hand, and so forth. Thus, in some embodiments, for a game suchas three-card poker, described above, where a set of a fixed number ofcards is dealt to each player position, the table manager 450automatically associates the set of cards with a player position as thecards are dealt. The set of cards may be a partial player hand of cards,a complete hand of player cards, a partial hand of dealer cards, acomplete hand of dealer cards, a set of community cards, a set ofreplacement cards or another set of cards used in the game. In oneembodiment, as card information relating to various cards and card setsis received from the card handling system 250, an indication may beplaced on the dealer display 640 indicating the location for each cardor each set of cards to assist the dealer 610 in administering the gameand preventing errors.

The table manager 450 also manages requesting and receiving actions by aplayer for the game play. When a decision is presented to a playeraccording to the rules of the game, such as a dealer 610 requesting awagering election by announcing the request through microphone 625, orelectronically requesting an election through a dealer interface (notshown), the table manager 450 signals the computing device 600 topresent or display the user with the options available to the user. Inembodiments, the dealer 610 verbally requests an election and receivesan option election verbally. In other embodiments, the option selectedis made by inputting an election into an input device of the computingdevice 600. The option selected by the user is returned to the tablemanager 450, which presents the player's option to the dealer 610 usingthe player action indicator 650 or the dealer display 640. In someembodiments, a camera and microphone (not shown) may be associated withthe player's computing device 600 and a video and audio feed of theplayer may be received by the table manager 450 and transmitted to anddisplayed on the dealer display 640.

Cards dispensed and card information provided by the card handlingsystem 250 may be dispensed responsive to a dealer action 610, such asby taking a card from the card handling system 250, or the dealerpressing a button on the card handling system 250. Alternatively, thecard handling system 250 dispenses a card responsive to a control signalsent by table manager 450. The control signal may be send, for example,when rules of the game indicate a card is to be dealt. For example, in agame with community cards, when all players have provided an election,the table manager 450 may automatically signal to the card handlingsystem 250 that an additional community card is to be dealt.

The table manager 450 manages wagers placed by a player and according tothe game rules, awards winnings and collects losses accordingly. Thus,the amount available to wager is stored in one embodiment by the tablemanager 450. In other embodiments, the table manager may be responsiblefor determining wins and losses of a single wager only, and a separateentity, such as a financial institution or a casino maintaining playeraccounts, manages adjusting the players accounts based on the gameresults determined by table manager 450.

The table manager 450 also coordinates presentation of information tothe user by transmitting the received video and audio of the camera 620and microphone 625 to the computing device 600 for display to the user.When suitable for the game rules, the table manager also transmits cardinformation such as rank and suit of cards, hand compositioninformation, hands in a round information and historical hand and roundinformation to the computing device, permitting the computing device 600to separately display cards to the user that may or may not be viewableon the play area 630. While shown here as relating to a single computingdevice 600, many computing devices 600 may communicate with the tablemanager 450 for playing at the table 405.

For example, in one embodiment, the gaming table 405 has five distinctplayer positions. Players may select a particular table that has aplayer position that is not being accessed by a computing device 600.The table manager 450 may receive an input from computing device 600indicating a player has selected a specific position, such as position 2and play a game with other players who have selected different positionson the same table.

The table manager 450 in one embodiment transmits card informationviewable by the player position played by the computing device 600. Forexample, in certain games, player cards are not permitted to be sharedbetween players, and may be dealt face-down by the dealer 610 in theplay area 630. The card information, as read by the card handling system250 is transmitted to the table manager 450, and the cards viewable byeach player position is transmitted by the table manager 450 to thecomputing device associated with that player position. As wagers areresolved, the face-down cards are overturned by the dealer 610 andplayers can confirm that the cards shown by the computing devices 600are matched by the cards that were actually dealt to the play area 630by viewing representations of the cards on a display associated with thecomputing device. In other embodiments, the player only sees a livevideo feed of the physical cards on the table, and the card and handrank and suit information is used to determine wins and losses by thetable manager 450.

In certain games, multiple computing devices 600 may be associated witha single player position. In these games, player decisions do not affecta player's hand, but rather affect only whether the player continues inthe hand. For example, in three-card poker, a player's three-card handis not changed during the round of play, as a player makes a decisionwhether to make a play bet or to fold. When multiple players areassociated with a single player position, these players share the samehand. For the players that decide to fold, their wager is resolved basedon the fold decision, while for players that decide to play, their wageris resolved based on the play decision. Since the player decisions donot affect the strength of a player's hand or the gameplay results, manyplayers can share the same player position while allowing each playerfull control over the gaming play. In this embodiment, the table manager450 waits for all players associated with a player position to select anaction at each decision point in the round. After each player associatedwith the player position makes a decision, the table manager 450 signalsthe dealer 610 to continue. In some embodiments, back betting ispermitted at each player position. The player position is first electedby an active player, and then all other players associated with the sameposition are passive back betters. If the game requires a playerelection, players back betting on the same hand must accept the activeplayer's play elections. For example, if the game is a Three Card Poker™game and the active better elects to fold, the passive players must alsofold.

In additional embodiments, the table manager 450 manages multiple playerpositions for a same game, and transmits information viewable to eachplayer position to the player associated with that position. Actionstaken by one player in a game can have an impact on options available toanother player, which adds a social aspect to the games and makes thegames more interesting to players.

The table manager 450 may also maintain and transmit information to thecomputing devices 600 related to prior hands of play, for the player ormultiple players, as described above.

The table manager 450 communicates with the computing device 600 througha suitable network (not shown). The network may be any networkingcommunications system, such as a TCP/IP network, and in typicalconfigurations is the internet. The computing device 600 typicallyestablishes a connection to the table manager 450 through at least oneintermediary system, as shown in subsequent figures, and is showndirectly connected to the table manager 450 in this figure forconvenience.

The computing device 600 is a computing device with a processor, memory,and other features for providing gaming services to a user of thecomputing device 600. The computing device 600 may be a desktop orlaptop computer, a tablet, handheld computer, a mobile device, or anyother suitable machine for communicating with the table manager 450. Thecomputing device 600 receives the video and audio feed from the tablemanager 450 and displays the video and audio feed to the user of thecomputing device 600 along with an interface for selecting actions inthe game and placing wagers. The computing device 600 executes computercode on the processor for providing these functions. The computingdevice may execute a full-featured client or may execute a thin client,according to the implementation of the invention. In one embodiment, thecomputing device 600 executes a thin client that does not maintain anygame rules, instead receiving instructions regarding game elementinteractions from the table manager 450 as game events that change thestatus of game elements, such as wagers or cards. In another embodiment,the computing device 600 executes an application associated with athird-party casino that includes an interface in the application forconnecting with table manager 450.

In this way, the camera 620 can show the remote dealer at the computingdevice 600 video feed of the play of the game, and allows the player toview the game as it is played, in addition to visually verifying thedealing of cards by the card handling system 250. In addition, as thecard information is automatically read for each card by the cardhandling system 250, it reduces the risk of error by the dealer 610 inthe game where users are located remotely from the display of the game,while allowing users to engage is a dealer-dealt game with a live personadministering the game rather than playing a virtual computer-dealtgame. In addition, reading the card information at the card handlingsystem 250 prevents user error or delay in providing card informationafter the cards have been dealt.

FIG. 13 illustrates one embodiment of an interface 700 displayed on thecomputing device 600 including a video feed of the table 405. Theinterface 700 includes a table video feed 710 and a user interface 720.The table video feed 710 provides the video that was captured by camera620 trained on the dealer. In this example, a play area 630 forthree-card poker is shown, though any suitable game may be played usingthis system. The play area in this example includes a three-card handarea for the player and a three-card hand area for the dealer. While asingle player's hand is shown in this embodiment, in other embodimentswhere multiple player positions are played, each player position's handmay be shown. As the dealer receives cards from the card handling system250, the dealer deals the cards to play area 630. Using the video feed,the player can view the dealer, card handling system, and play areaduring the gameplay through the table video feed 710, allowing a morerealistic feeling to the game. In various embodiments, the cardinformation may also be presented to the user. This is particularlyuseful where the cards have been placed face-down, but may also beuseful to the user even when the cards are visible in the table videofeed 710.

The table video feed 710 also includes betting areas 730. The bettingareas 730 are a portion of the interface added by the computing device600 as a layer on the table video feed 710. When a player wishes toplace a bet, the player selects a chip denomination 722 from the userinterface 720 and places the bet in the betting area 730. In thisexample of three-card poker, to initiate a game, the player may select a$5 clip from the chip denominations 722 and places the $5 chip in theante and pair plus betting areas 730. The user interface 720 includesadditional interface elements for the player to interact with thecomputing device 600. When the computing device 600 receives anindication from the table manager 450 that the player must make adecision, actions 724 become available for the player to respond to thedecision. In various embodiments, the actions 724 for a player arepresented in different ways. For example, the actions 724 may be apop-up in a dedicated window to draw attention to the action 724.

The user interface 720 in this embodiment includes a chat window 726.The chat window 726 permits communications between players, and betweenthe players and the dealer 610. The chat messages entered by players arereceived by the table manager 450 and provided to the dealer display640, enabling the players and dealer to interact with one another.

FIG. 14 shows one embodiment of an environment of implementing a tablemanager 450. In this embodiment, a computing device 600 communicateswith a networked casino system 810. While depicted here separatesystems, gaming provider 800 and networked casino system 810 areimplemented in some embodiments in the same system. The gaming provider800 provides a gateway for a group of tables (and associated tablemanagers 450) to be accessed by other systems. When players request tojoin a game, the gaming provider 800 selects a table manager 450 for theplayer to join. As shown, the gaming provider 800 may receive requeststo provide tables from several networked casino systems 810, and mayprovide tables that are joined by members of various networked casinosystems 810.

The gaming provider 800 also receives an indication from networkedcasino system 810 indicating money available for the player to wager ina particular game. In one embodiment, the gaming provider does not takepossession of wagering funds, and rather reports results from tablemanager 450 to the networked casino system 810. In one embodiment, thegaming provider 800 takes possession of wagering funds. In oneembodiment, the gaming provider 800 associates received funds with ascreen name or handle and does not maintain financial details associatedwith the player.

The networked casino system 810 maintains an account relating to theuser, including a user name and financial information. The financialinformation may include a bankroll or other budget associated with moneyavailable for gaming, or may include financial details such as a creditcard or bank information for obtaining or securing such money. Thenetworked casino system 810 may also have a relationship with manygaming providers, permitting users associated with the networked casinosystem to select a provider desired by the player, and permitting thenetworked casino system 810 to select gaming providers 800 that providea variety of games.

FIG. 15 is a method for facilitating game play by the table manager 450according to one embodiment. The table manager 450 receives 900 a videofeed of the gaming table from a camera and receives an initial playerwager 910. The game is initiated 920, and the video feed is provided tothe user device, which may be provided prior to receiving the initialplayer wager. Initiating 920 the gaming round includes clearing memoryrelated to the current round of a game play and receiving informationfrom the card handling device that it has shuffled cards related to thegame. Received information can include the number of hands dealt, handcomposition, card information, partial hand information, etc. Next, thecard handling device deals cards, either under the direction of thetable manager 450 or because it received an indication from a dealer,e.g., by a button press, to begin dealing. As cards are dealt, cardinformation is sent by the card handling device to the table manager 450which receives 930 the card information. Using the card information andgame rules, the card information is associated with the appropriatelocation. That is, the card may be associated with a hand, burned,community cards, or another aspect of the game.

The video feed is transmitted to the computing device, and whenapplicable, the card information is also transmitted 950. Next, therules of the game determine what options are available to the playersand whether additional cards must be dealt. When there are additionalcards to deal, the additional cards are dealt and the card informationis received 930 and associated 940 with the appropriate designation.When there is a player action remaining, the computing device issignaled 970, which provides a received response based on the actionsavailable to the user. Finally, after the round is complete, the user'swager is resolved 990.

Systems of the present invention advantageously deliver live video feedof a live dealer dealing a game on a gaming table to a player who canobserve the dealer and dealer actions through a computing device.Combining the live dealer interactions with data acquired from theautomatic card shuffler provides the player with a more secure gamingexperience, and provides the player with more information that can beused for analysis and game play election decisions. For example, aplayer may have the ability to arrange a virtual hand of cards on aplayer display associated with the computing device 600 when the handcomposition is derived from the shuffler and the data is transmitted tothe computing device 600. Manipulating cards is not possible when theonly indication of the hand is on a live dealer feed. Additionally, whenthe remote dealer delivers a hand of cards to a player position on thetable, the system already has knowledge of the hand composition, makingit impossible for the player to collude with the dealer and switchcards. This extra level of security therefore prevents some forms ofcheating and therefore presents a more secure and fair gamingenvironment for the player.

Although the embodiments of the invention may have been described withreference to particular card games, it should be appreciated that theymay be applicable to any other casino communal or non-communal cardgames.

While the embodiments of the invention have been described in detail inconnection with preferred embodiments known at the time, the inventionis not limited to the disclosed embodiments. Rather, the invention canbe modified to incorporate any number of variations, alterations,substitutions, or equivalent arrangements not heretofore described, butwhich are commensurate with the scope of the invention. Accordingly, theinvention is not limited by the foregoing description or drawings, butis only limited by the scope of the appended claims, includingequivalents thereof.

What is claimed is:
 1. A gaming system configured to conduct a casinotable game with a live dealer at a table and one or more players locatedremotely from the live dealer, each of the one or more playersparticipating in the casino table game via a respective mobile deviceconnected for communication with the gaming system via a network, thegaming system comprising: a card-handling device configured to randomizeone or more decks of cards; a card-recognition system configured to readcard information of cards under control of the card-handling device, thecard information including card rank and card suit; and game-logiccircuitry configured to: direct the card-handling device to dispensecards of a player hand for each of the one or more players to a tableposition associated with the respective player; transmit, to the mobiledevice of each of the one or more players, the card informationcorresponding to the player hand of the respective player, video imagedata of the live dealer at the table during play of the casino tablegame, and/or voice or text communication from the live dealer; andreceive, from an input device of each mobile device, an input indicativeof a player election responsive to the transmitted card information;wherein the gaming system is further configured to optionally transmitsounds between the dealer and one or more remote players.
 2. The gamingsystem of claim 1, further comprising a camera configured to capture thevideo image data of the live dealer at the table.
 3. The gaming systemof claim 1, wherein the card-handling device is configured to dispensethe cards of the player hand to the live dealer for distribution to thetable position associated with the respective player.
 4. The gamingsystem of claim 1, wherein the game-logic circuitry is furtherconfigured to receive a user-selection of a pre-programmed set ofexecutable instructions for conducting one or more different casinotable games, wherein the pre-programmed set includes instructions forone or more of randomizing cards, dispensing cards of one or more playerhands, or reading card information of cards in the dispensed hands. 5.The gaming system of claim 1, wherein the gaming system is furtherconfigured to provide two-way voice communication between the livedealer and the one or more players via the mobile devices of the one ormore players.
 6. The gaming system of claim 1, wherein at least onemobile device is a cell phone.
 7. The gaming system of claim 1, whereinthe gaming system is further configured to receive, from an input deviceof each mobile device, a player selection of at least one of a livedealer from a plurality of live dealers, a casino table game from aplurality of casino table games, or a table position from a plurality oftable positions.
 8. A computer-implemented method of conducting a casinotable game by a gaming system, the casino table game including a livedealer at a table and one or more players located remotely from the livedealer, the gaming system being connected for communication over anetwork, the gaming system including a card-handling device, acard-recognition system, and a network interface, the method comprising:connecting, via the network interface, to a mobile device associatedwith each of the respective one or more players to a gaming system;receiving, from an input device of each mobile device, aplayer-selection of a table position at the table; randomizing, via thecard-handling device, one or more decks of cards; reading, via thecard-recognition system, card information including card rank and cardsuit of the cards under control of the card-handling device; dispensing,via the card-handling device, cards of a player hand for each of the oneor more players to the table position associated with the respectiveplayer; transmitting, via the network interface to each mobile device,the card information corresponding to the player hand of the respectiveplayer, video image data of the live dealer at the table during play ofthe casino table game, and/or voice or text communication from the livedealer; and receiving, from an input device of each mobile device, aninput indicative of a player election responsive to the transmitted cardinformation; wherein the gaming system is further configured tooptionally transmit sounds between the dealer and one or more remoteplayers.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein each mobile device includesone or more of a video display device and a microphone.
 10. The methodof claim 8, wherein at least one mobile device associated with a playeris a cell phone.
 11. The method of claim 8, wherein the transmitted cardinformation is displayed to a respective player via a display device ofthe player's mobile device.
 12. The method of claim 8, wherein voicecommunication between the live dealer and at least one of the one ormore players is transmitted via a microphone and speaker proximal thetable and a microphone and speaker of the respective mobile device. 13.The method of claim 8, wherein the transmitted card information isdisplayed as images of the dealt cards on a display device of theplayer's mobile device.
 14. A gaming system configured to conduct acasino table game with a live dealer at a table and one or more playerslocated remotely from the live dealer, each of the one or more playersparticipating in the casino table game via a respective mobile deviceconfigured to communicate with the gaming system via a network, thegaming system comprising: a card-handling device at the table configuredto randomize one or more decks of cards; a card-recognition systemconfigured to read card information of cards under control of thecard-handling device, the card information including card rank and cardsuit; a table-management system configured to monitor video image dataand/or sound data at the table; and a control system configured to:direct operations of the table-management system, the card-handlingdevice, and the card-recognition system; execute user-selected functionsincluding one or more of shuffling operations, sorting operations,dealing operations, or recalling card information; transmit, to themobile device of each of the one or more players, (i) the cardinformation corresponding to the player hand of the respective player,(ii) video image data of the live dealer at the table during play of thecasino table game, and/or (iii) voice or text communication from thelive dealer; and receive, from an input device of each mobile device, aninput indicative of a player election responsive to the transmitted cardinformation; wherein the gaming system is further configured to transmitsounds between the dealer and one or more remote players.
 15. The gamingsystem of claim 14, wherein the control system is further configured toreceive, from an input device of each mobile device, a player selectionof at least one of a live dealer from a plurality of live dealers, acasino table game from a plurality of casino table games, or a tableposition from a plurality of table positions.
 16. The gaming system ofclaim 14, wherein the card-handling device is configured to dispense thecards of the player hand to the live dealer for distribution to therespective player position at the table.
 17. The gaming system of claim14, wherein the gaming system is further configured to provide two-wayvoice communication between the live dealer and the one or more playersvia the mobile devices of the one or more players.
 18. The gaming systemof claim 14, wherein at least one mobile device is a cell phone.
 19. Thegaming system of claim 14, wherein each mobile device includes one ormore of a video display device and a microphone.
 20. The gaming systemof claim 14, wherein voice communication between the live dealer and atleast one of the one or more players is transmitted via thetable-management system and a microphone and speaker of the respectivemobile device.